Best of our wild blogs: 6 Oct 10


13 Oct (Wed): Launch of the WWF 2010 Living Planet report in Singapore from Celebrating Singapore's BioDiversity!

Monkey Walk
from Crystal and Bryan in Singapore (and beyond)

A Bag of Bones – A National Heritage and a Lesson for Humanity?
from Deadpoet's Cave

Calls of the White-throated Kingfisher
from Bird Ecology Study Group

Republic Poly @ Lim Chu Kang beach & mangrove
from News from the International Coastal Cleanup Singapore

Hope for the World’s Smallest Bears
from Bornean Sun Bear Conservation


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Scientists discover 200 new species in remote PNG

Google News 6 Oct 10;

SYDNEY — Scientists Wednesday unveiled a spectacular array of more than 200 new species discovered in the Pacific islands of Papua New Guinea, including a white-tailed mouse and a tiny, long-snouted frog.

The survey of remote New Britain island and the Southern Highlands ranges, accessible only by a combination of small plane, dinghy, helicopter and foot, found an exciting range of new mammals, amphibians, insects and plants.

"To find a completely new genus of mammal in this day and age is pretty cool," said lead researcher Steve Richards of the new mouse species discovery.

"I mean, people have heard of birds of paradise and tree-climbing kangaroos and stuff, but when you look even closer at the small things you just realise that there's a staggering diversity out there that we really know nothing about," he told AFP.

Papua New Guinea's jungles are one of just three wild rainforest areas, along with the Amazon and the Congo basin, left in the world and Richards said they were a vast "storehouse" of biodiversity, with scores of new species found by his Conservation International team.

The "very, very beautiful mouse", the two-centimetre (0.8 inch) long-snouted frog and another with bright yellow spots were among the highlights, but the expedition documented 100 new species in each of the spider and insect orders alone, he said.

"I would say that pretty much no matter where you go in New Guinea you're guaranteed to pick up new or poorly known spectacular species," said Richards, an expert in frogs and reptiles who is based in Cairns, Australia.

"For some lesser known groups only half of the things that we document actually have names, we aren't even a fraction of the way there," he added.

The rugged, mountainous and largely inaccessible terrain meant biologists had not even been able to enter some regions and Richards said there were "large areas of New Guinea that are pretty much unexplored biologically".

Sample animals were taken of a number of species, including the mouse, and genetic testing had confirmed that it was not related to any known creature, he said.

"These kind of discoveries are almost kind of a good news story amongst all the gloom," he said, referring to the creeping extinction of other creatures.

"There really are spectacular species still out there and there really is a potential for things to survive."

More on the Conservation International website

Pictures: Tube-Nosed Bat, More Rare Species Found on National Geographic.


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Dracula fish, lipstick gecko among new Mekong finds: WWF

Reuters AlertNet 6 Oct 10;

TOKYO, Oct 6 (Reuters Life!) - A fish with curving vampire fangs, a gecko that looks as if it's wearing lipstick and a carnivorous plant more than seven metres (23 feet) high may sound like creatures from a nightmare but they are real.

They are just three of 145 new species found in the area surrounding Southeast Asia's Mekong River in 2009 and highlighted in a WWF International report issued on Wednesday ahead of the UN Convention on Biological Diversity in Nagoya, Japan, this month.

The diversity of the region, so rich that an average of three new species were discovered each week last year, also highlights the need for action to ensure these new finds survive, WWF International said.

Among the animals highlighted in "New Blood: Greater Mekong New Species Discoveries 2009" is the Dracula minnow, with bulging eyes and two sharp fangs curving from its low-slung jaw. Luckily, the fish only grows to a maximum of 16.7 mm (0.7 inch).

Cuter by far is the lipstick gecko, barely big enough to perch on a finger, with a dark barred pattern across its lips suggestive of cosmetics.

Other featured creatures include a fangless snake, a frog that chirps like a cricket, and a pitcher plant that traps insects and grows to a height of over seven metres.

"This rate of discovery is simply staggering in modern times," said Stuart Chapman, Conservation Director of WWF Greater Mekong, in a statement.

"Each year, the new species count keeps going up, and with it, so too does the responsibilty to ensure this region's unique biodiversity is conserved."

The report said these discoveries highlight the Greater Mekong's immense biodiversity but they also pinpoint the fragility of the region's diverse habitats and species.

The WWF report cited the likely local extinction of the Javan rhino in Vietnam as one tragic indicator of the decline of biodiversity in recent times.

The Greater Mekong region covers Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam and the southern Chinese province of Yunnan.

New discoveries in the Greater Mekong highlight the need for urgent action
WWF 5 Oct 10;

A seven meter tall carnivorous plant, a fish with vampire fangs, and a frog that sounds like a cricket are among 145 new species described last year in the Greater Mekong, reaffirming the region as a one of the most significant biological hotspots on the planet ahead of the UN Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) in Nagoya, Japan.

New Blood: Greater Mekong new species discoveries 2009, reveals an average of three new species recorded by science each week including Asia’s only bald songbird the Bare-faced bulbul and the uniquely adapted Sucker-fish, which uses its body to sucker onto rocks in fast flowing waters to move upstream.

“This rate of discovery is simply staggering in modern times,” said Stuart Chapman, Conservation Director of WWF Greater Mekong. “Each year, the new species count keeps going up, and with it, so too does the responsibility to ensure this region’s unique biodiversity is conserved,” he said.

The report says while these discoveries highlight the Greater Mekong’s immense biodiversity it also pinpoints the fragility of this region’s diverse habitats and species. The likely local extinction of the Javan rhino in Vietnam is one tragic indicator of the decline of biodiversity in recent times.

Other new species standouts that were discovered in this region that comprises Cambodia, Laos, Myanmar, Thailand, Vietnam and the southern province of Yunnan in China include five new mammal species, two bats and three shrews, a poisonous pit viper and an entirely new genus of fang-less snake.

The report highlights the opportunity for governments of the Greater Mekong to use financing through the Global Environment Facility (GEF), the global financing mechanism for the CBD, to leverage large-scale resources to conserve species, biodiversity and healthy ecosystems across the region.

“Biodiversity is not evenly distributed around the globe. These new species are a timely reminder of the extraordinary biodiversity in the Greater Mekong,” said Mr Chapman. “Therefore a greater allocation of funds is needed to ensure these valuable ecosystems are conserved.”

At the CBD, WWF will promote opportunities for the Global Environment Facility to provide financing for a trans-boundary programme in the Greater Mekong that recognizes the role of biodiversity and healthy ecosystems.

New Blood: Greater Mekong new species discoveries 2009 2.73 MB pdf


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Seaweed Estates Taking Shape In Sabah

Elizabeth Majaham Bernama 5 Oct 10;

KOTA KINABALU, Oct 5 (Bernama) -- Universiti Malaysia Sabah (UMS) is trying out the mini estate concept to boost seaweed production that may help Malaysia emerge as one of the global seaweed producer.

The seaweed estates are now under trial in Semporna on the east coast of Sabah, the location seen most suitable as it is part of the Coral Triangle encompassing leading seaweed producers Indonesia and the Philippines.

According to Associate Professor Dr Suhaimi Md Yasir of UMS' School of Science and Technology phase one will stretch over 2,000 hectares that in terms of productivity should yield about one to five million metric tonnes of seaweed per year.

"We will try to achieve this figure, which has a value of about US$130 million (RM404.3m)", he says.

UMS is in the Malaysian Seaweed Development Industry Steering Committee chaired by the Fisheries Department.

GOOD POTENTIAL

"In Phase One we look at the database e.g. oceanography, water quality for that area and so on. Because when you have the database, it's easy for the investors to come in. They know the water quality, area, topography, weather pattern and so on.

"How you manage the nursery for the seedling collection is very important in maintaining growth rate and quality", stresses Dr Suhaimi.

Phase Two is from 2011 to 2015 (Tenth Malaysia Plan), covering not only Sabah but Sarawak and the Peninsula too. The seaweed planting trial has been conducted in Langkawi and Terengganu as well.

Dr Suhaimi says while Phase One is about capacity building among others, Phase Two will aim for national development, meaning seaweed becomes a commodity.

"It will no longer be small-scale but involves 50,000 to 100,000 hectares with a production target of about 200,000 to 300,000 metric tonnes per year.

"We want the private sector and government-linked companies (GLCs) to be involved. We also want to nurture small and medium scale entrepreneurs in this field. We work on the quality", he stressed.

Towards this end, UMS has already enlisted the collaboration of the Federal Land Development Authority (Felda).

Even now a local company started by Salleh Mohd Salleh in 2009, with a few foreign investors and Tawau-based Tacara Sdn Bhd, are already producing 500 metric tonnes per month and are exporting seaweed-based products.

WORLD SEAWEED OUTPUT

Indonesia is currently the leading producer of seaweed with an output of 150,000 metric tonnes in 2009 having overtaken the Philippines which could only manage 100,000 metric tonnes.

Presently, Malaysia is placed insignificantly under 'others' accounting for just five percent. World demand is expected to reach 400,000 metric tonnes by 2012.

Indonesia has indicated that it would ban raw seaweed export by that time. Hence Malaysia's necessity to increase productivity, in order to cater for export and domestic needs.

The Coral Triangle is capable of supplying 80 percent of the world demand with the 'kappaphycus' type of seaweed, known for its thickening and gelling properties, that can be found in abundance. It is a major source of carrageenan, a colloidal substance chiefly used as an emulsifying and stabilizing ingredient in foods, cosmetics and pharmaceuticals.

UMS has already identified 11 species of the 'kappaphycus'.

To further develop the industry, the Coral triangle has signed an agreement with BIMP-EAGA.

In this regard, downstream processing is one ongoing activity, currently under Sirim's responsibility and led by UKM at its Seaweed Downstream Research Centre.

"With these products the target for the country is US$1.5 billion (RM4.7b) per year.

"Although we are small we are capable of meeting the target", Dr Suhaimi said optimistically.

THE MINI ESTATE CONCEPT FOR SEAWEED

Conventionally, seaweed cultivation entails 80 percent labour (working at the sea) and 20 percent technology.

"We want to turn it around now - the mini estate concept is eco-friendly, doing away with environmental issues associated with the tedious conventional method, labour effective, an easy strategy, with 80 percent of the work done on the complex and 20 percent under the sun.

Meanwhile, UMS Deputy Vice Chancellor Prof Dr Rosnah Ismail who led a team including the writer to the islands to see the progress noted that the university first initiated a seaweed farming project in Pulau Banggi, Kudat in 1998.

"The objective then was R & D and to raise the income of poor households. The project was to encourage as many participants as possible", she recalls.

The result of the Banggi Project was a success, raising the income of some 20 households that seriously participated to between RM3,000 and RM5,000 per month.

"UMS is recognized as the lead agency for R & D in the BIMP-EAGA region", she says, adding that the university was supported with a grant of about RM3.5 million from the Department of Fisheries and LKIM for the Banggi project.

A YOUNG ENTREPRENEUR'S EXPERIENCE

Meanwhile, Japson Wong, 25, from Kota Kinabalu and a UMS graduate in Marine Science is a participant in the mini estate concept.

His interest in seaweed aquaculture was sparked by his experience while doing field work in Banggi under Prof Dr Mohd Rizuan Nordin and further exposure to seaweed farming during his industrial training.

He applied through the Sabah Fisheries Department to be included in the Graduate Farmers Programme.

By April 2009, he was already in Pulau Omadal, where he and 21 other participants, including four women from Lahad Datu, Keningau and Kota Kinabalu were allotted two hectares each, a house and the necessary tools to start their respective project.

"When we started we encountered a lot of problems. Bad weeds were growing because the area was quite shallow", he related.

The unwanted weeds affected growth rate. Progress was slow and to make matters worse, the seaweeds would sometimes just drop into the sea.

There is also that seasonal challenge - the north and south winds. The north wind is the good one because the waves that follow are from the deep sea which contains the nutrients that nourish the seaweeds, he says.

Wong realises it is a tedious endeavour which will not make him rich in the near future. He does not know whether he could sustain. But the thought that he will eventually prosper from all the hard work keeps him going.

-- BERNAMA


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Anson Wong to lose wildlife after withdrawal of permits

Tan Sin Chow The Star 6 Oct 10;

GEORGE TOWN: The state Wildlife and National Parks Depart­ment will seize all wildlife under the care of convicted wildlife smuggler Anson Wong and his wife.

Its director Jamalun Nasir Ibrahim said all permits and business licences issued to Wong and his wife Cheah Bing Shee had been revoked.

He added that all wildlife species in their possession under existing and expired licences and permits would also be seized.

“The permits revoked include the special one issued that allowed Wong to keep two Bengal tigers and a crocodile,” he said here yesterday.

It was reported that the two endangered Bengal tigers, allegedly belonging to Wong, were previously kept at the Bukit Jambul Hibiscus, Orchids and Reptile Farm but have been moved to a private location in Teluk Bahang.

It is learnt that the department is waiting for clearance from headquarters before it launches a special operation to seize the animals.

“These animals are still being kept at a farm in Teluk Bahang. Our headquarters is looking for a suitable location to keep them after the seizure,” he said in an interview at his office in Komtar here on Monday.

Wong was arrested at the KL International Airport on Aug 28 for trying to smuggle out 95 boa constrictors, two rhinoceros vipers and a Mata Mata turtle without a permit from Penang to Jakarta.

On his new post, Jamalun said he knew he was in a hot seat and had a tough task ahead, especially after the Anson Wong incident.

Jamalun, who took over from Noor Alif Wira Osman, who has been transferred to the headquarters effective Sept 30, said he would find ways to improve any shortcomings in existing application procedures.

“I will also monitor the application of wildlife shipments, for import or export, personally,” he added.

Jamalun, who served as the state department’s deputy director from 1991 to 1994, felt it was unfair for the department to take the blame for the smuggling incident.

He said this was because Wong had not declared his shipments before his arrest at the KLIA.


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South Africa launches crime unit to battle rhino poaching

Johannes Myburgh Yahoo News 5 Oct 10;

PRETORIA (AFP) – South Africa launched Tuesday a special wildlife crime unit to tackle a dramatic surge in rhino poaching, driven by demand for the animal's horn in Asia for use in traditional medicines.

Rhino poaching has doubled this year in South Africa, with 227 slaughtered so far compared to 122 in all of last year.

Environment Minister Buyelwa Sonjica convened a two-day "rhino summit" Tuesday to bring together police and wildlife experts, and unveiled a new crime-fighting unit to crack down on poaching.

"The National Wildlife Crime Investigation Unit will, among others, react immediately when a serious wildlife crime has been committed and be able to detect and investigate smuggling of wildlife and wildlife products," she said.

"It should shock us all that to date about 227 animals have been killed illegally," she added.

The new unit will bring together national and provincial wildlife authorities, who will then coordinate with police to act swiftly in new cases of poaching.

Trade in rhino horns is banned internationally, but black market demand has fuelled a rise in high-tech poaching with marksmen darting the animals from helicopters and then hacking off the horn while they lie unconscious, according to police.

The animal is simply left to die.

Alarmed by the growing number of rhino deaths, South Africa has arrested scores of people -- many of them Vietnamese -- on poaching charges.

The horns are coveted for medicinal and ornamental use in East and Southeast Asia, where it is used to treat fever and high blood pressure.

The East Asian economic boom has powered the demand of rhino horn, with buyers willing to pay up to 2,500 dollars (1,900 euros) for a single horn, which can weigh up to 11 kilos (24 pounds).

The surge in demand, combined with endemic poverty in many of the animal's habitats, has helped to push rhino poaching to the highest levels in 15 years, according to wildlife monitoring group Traffic.

South Africa has 26 poaching cases before the courts, with most of the 80 people arrested of Vietnamese origin.

One high-profile case also snared two veterinarians, a game farm owner and a pilot, who were among 11 people arrested last month on charges of running a poaching ring near the world-famous Kruger National Park.

Five others were arrested last weekend in connection with the killings of at least five rhinos in eastern KwaZulu-Natal province, according to wildlife authorities.

"We are dealing with a mighty force, but I think it's a force we can defeat," said Sonjica.

South Africa plans a bi-lateral meeting with Vietnam to discuss rhino poaching, said Sonjica, who is heading to China on Wednesday to for talks on the issue.

Rhino numbers in South Africa have grown to over 20,000 since the 1960s, after successful conservation efforts saved the species from extinction.


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Japan Vows On Climate Bill, Biodiversity Goal

Chisa Fujioka PlanetArk 6 Oct 10;

Japan's environment minister said on Tuesday he aimed to pass a climate bill soon and forge ahead with plans to launch an emissions trading scheme but gave few clues on how to win help from opposition parties in a divided parliament.

Environment Minister Ryu Matsumoto also said a U.N. meeting in Japan this month must agree on a global target to protect the diversity of plants and animals after failure to reach a goal set in 2002 of a "significant reduction" in losses by 2010.

Japan's climate bill, which backs the creation of an emissions trading scheme, was shelved earlier this year and faces an uncertain fate in a divided parliament, where opposition parties can block legislation in the upper house.

"We are aiming to pass the climate bill at an early date," Matsumoto, who took his post last month in a cabinet reshuffle, told Reuters in an interview.

"An emissions trading scheme is an important part of our mid- and long-term (emissions reduction) target and we will deepen our study into the design while eyeing submitting related bills to parliament next year."

Japan has pledged to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 25 percent from 1990 levels by 2020 on condition a global climate deal is signed by all major emitters, including the United States and China.

The climate bill would make the target legally binding and set a one-year deadline for Japan to design a compulsory emissions trading system. Currently, it only has a voluntary market at the national level based on companies' pledged goals.

The bill will be presented in its current form to an extra parliament session running until December 3.

Matsumoto said the government would be flexible in debating the bill, adding there was scope for talks both with the main opposition Liberal Democrats, who want the bill watered down, and the third-largest party New Komeito, which favours a tougher stance.

NATURE'S RICHES

Japan is also committed to take the lead on ironing out differences between rich and poor nations over a global target to preserve biological diversity that will be a focal point for an upcoming U.N. meeting in Nagoya, central Japan, Matsumoto said.

Experts say tension between the European Union and poor countries could undermine the talks from October 18-29 to set a new global goal to protect nature's riches that are vital to everything from clean air and water to medicine and food.

The world will fail to reach a goal set in 2002 for a significant reduction in biodiversity losses by 2010, the United Nations has said.

"What we are most agreed on is that there must not be a gap period," said Matsumoto, who attended a U.N. summit on the issue last month in New York. "There was indication that everything must be done to compile a post-2010 (target)."

A draft strategic plan for 2020, set to be formally adopted at the Nagoya talks, calls for "effective and urgent action" either "to halt the loss of biodiversity by 2020" or "toward halting the loss of biodiversity" with no deadline.

Matsumoto said funding from rich countries for developing countries to safeguard biodiversity would be discussed at the meeting. Current funding is about $3 billion a year but developing nations say this should be increased 100-fold.

"Given the responsibility of chairing the meeting, we are considering measures of support to realize the post-2010 target," Matsumoto said, although adding that he wanted to first explain how much Japan has provided so far on biodiversity.

"We are aware of talks for the need for a 100-fold increase and funding is an issue to be considered."

(Editing by Chris Gallagher and Sugita Katyal)


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"30 Ways in 30 Days" to inspire action on reducing emissions and transition to global Green Economy

UNEP 5 Oct 10;

Mexico City/Nairobi, 5 October 2010 - From creating mass markets for solar water heaters to planting trees and protecting forests, the United Nations Environment Programme will be releasing 30 case studies in the run up to the UN climate convention in Mexico to prove that solutions to combat Climate Change are available, accessible and replicable.

"Across the globe, community-based programmes and entrepreneurial endeavor are challenging the status-quo through innovation and creativity. Importantly, they are delivering multiple benefits from access to energy, public health improvements and reduced environmental impacts to driving a transition to low carbon, greener growth. The challenge now is to accelerate and scale-up these world-wide transitions," said Achim Steiner, UN Under-Secretary General and UNEP Executive Director.

Current commitments and pledges under the Copenhagen Accord covering emissions up to 2020 provide a good platform for global action, but the level of current ambition is widely viewed as insufficient to meet the 2 degree warming limit.

The UNEP "30 Ways in 30 Days" initiative will be announced at a special Climate Neutral Network (CN Net) breakfast at the Business for the Environment Summit (B4E) in Mexico City, from 4-5 October. The B4E Summit - which is co-hosted by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP), The Global Compact, WWF, and Global Initiatives - is the world's premier international conference for dialogue and business-driven action for the environment.

Latest members of CN Net include Saitama Prefecture in Japan, which is part of the Greater Tokyo Area hosting a population of more than 7 million, and Corporation Solar Alliance in Ukraine, which is developing next-generation technologies for energy conservation and the saving of resources.

The first case study from the "30 Ways in 30 Days" initiative is "Solar Loans for Solar Homes." More than 60 per cent of Indian households have no access to reliable electricity supplies and depend on kerosene for light and on burning dung and wood for heat.

In an example of small-scale enterprise and entrepreneurship that expanded rapidly, UNEP's Indian Solar Loan Programme worked with two of India's largest banking groups in 2003 to provide low-interest loans for household photovoltaic systems. Photovoltaics are a method of generating electrical power by converting solar radiation into direct current electricity using semiconductors.

The programme provided technical support and training, as well as an interest rate buy-down that reimbursed banks for the difference between their normal lending rates and the reduced rate that borrowers paid.

While banks did not profit directly from these subsidies, they were keen to develop a new market for rural financing. Almost 20,000 solar home systems were financed between 2003 and 2007. Towards the end of the project, subsidies were gradually reduced to a free market rate, by which time other banks had begun lending on commercial terms.

The Solar Loan Programme accelerated market penetration of solar lights in the Indian countryside and inspired several similar initiatives in India and elsewhere. In 2008, the programme won the Globe Energy Award for sustainability and in 2009 it was one of only two field projects within the UN system to receive the Secretary General's UN21 Award awarded for innovation.

The Indian Solar Loan scheme has influenced national policy, with the Government of India sidelining its capital subsidy approach to supporting solar power in favour of interest subsidies. Costs of US$1.5 million in programme support and US$6.1 million in loans from the banking partners have been more than offset by household savings on kerosene and other traditional energy sources.

"Solar lights are a long cherished dream of rural folk who often have no power, or power supplies that are at best irregular. They are one product that can meet aspirations of people living below the poverty line. It is a good business opportunity for the Bank," said Mr. P G Ramesh, Chairman, Pragathi Grameen Bank, Bellary, Karnataka, India.

Many of the best opportunities for climate mitigation are household-scale technologies such as solar, biogas and high efficiency appliances. Consumer and micro-lending approaches can be replicated elsewhere and their scale adjusted according to need.

Daily climate case studies will be released online at www.unep.org/unite/30ways from 1 November to 8 December. Examples span a wide range of solutions across the globe from "green" tea to energy entrepreneurs, transport solutions, carbon finance innovation, eco-living and adaption strategies.

View a video of the Indian Solar Loan Programme here: http:// www.unep.org/newscentre/videos/shortfilms/2008-09-15_TaleOfTwoLights.flv


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China tells rich nations to improve emission targets

Dan Martin Yahoo News 5 Oct 10;

TIANJIN, China (AFP) – China on Tuesday told the United States and other rich nations to "dramatically" improve their greenhouse gas emission targets, blaming the countries for gridlock at UN climate change talks.

Delegates from more than 170 countries are in the northern Chinese city of Tianjin this week in an effort to break the stalemate in long-running United Nations negotiations aimed at forging a deal on tackling global warming.

Chief Chinese negotiator Su Wei told reporters that the actions of rich nations should be in focus in Tianjin and the major UN summit on climate change in Cancun, Mexico, next month.

"Many of the developed countries, especially a handful of them, have been very laggard on climate change actions and this has led to failure of major breakthroughs or progress in the negotiations," Su said.

Europe has pledged to cut its emissions of the greenhouse gases blamed for global warming by 20 percent by 2020, based on 1990 levels.

The United States has pledged a 17 percent reduction from 2005 levels.

But Su said these targets were not good enough.

"We believe it is a positive thing that they put forward these targets, but these targets are still far away from the expectations of developing countries and from what is demanded by science," Su said. "Therefore the emissions reduction goals of developed countries should be dramatically increased."

Su said China wanted the targets to be discussed as part of the negotiations for Cancun.

Rich industrialised countries and fast-growing developing nations have long tussled over who should carry the greatest burden for reducing greenhouse gases such as carbon dioxide.

The issue was one of the main reasons for the failure of world leaders to forge a comprehensive and binding deal on fighting climate change in Copenhagen last year.

At Copenhagen the world leaders agreed on a goal of limiting global temperature rises to two degrees Centigrade (3.6 degrees Fahrenheit).

However there was no agreement on how this would be done and by when.

Environmentalists warn countries have to act far more quickly to curb greenhouse gases and stop rising temperatures that could lead to catastrophic weather such as droughts and floods.

China overtook the United States in recent years as the biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, as its economy has roared ahead to become the world's second biggest.

But China has refused to commit to cutting emissions outright, stating this would unfairly hurt its economic development.

The United States and other developed countries have urged China to commit to emission cut targets as part of a planned post-2012 treaty on global warming to replace the Kyoto Protocol.

Although China has refused, it pledged last year to slow the growth in those emissions by reducing energy consumption per unit of GDP by 40-45 percent from 2005 levels by 2020, essentially a vow of greater energy efficiency.

Su said that China would continue to pursue its own domestic efforts to reduce greenhouse gases independently of the United States.

"Of course the United States has not taken concrete actions but the rest of us cannot use that as an excuse to say 'America is not doing anything, then we will not do anything'," he said. "We can't wait for America."

China says climate talks must tackle rich CO2 cuts
* China says CO2 cuts pledged by rich nations aren't enough
* Senior official says issue must be tackled in Cancun
* Expert says China emissions could peak 2020-2030 (Adds comment from delegate and expert in pars 12-14 and 21-23)
Chris Buckley Reuters 5 Oct 10;

TIANJIN, China, Oct 5 (Reuters) - Greenhouse gas cuts vowed by rich nations remain far from enough to escape dangerous global warming, a top Chinese official said on Tuesday, urging talks over a new climate pact to confront the shortfall.

China is the world's biggest greenhouse gas polluter and its emissions are sure to keep growing. [ID:nLDE68L23Z]

But Su Wei, the head of the climate change office at China's National Development and Reform Commission, said wealthy countries with their much higher per-capita emissions should make space for emerging economies to grow.

"The emissions targets of developed countries should be dramatically raised," he told a news conference at U.N. climate talks in the northern Chinese city of Tianjin.

Negotiators from 177 governments are meeting in Tianjin trying to coax agreement on what should follow the current phase of the Kyoto Protocol -- the key U.N. treaty on fighting global warming -- which expires in 2012.

Talks so far this year have focused on trust-building funding goals, with little talk about countries' targets to reduce greenhouse gases from fossil fuels and other sources blamed for heating up the atmosphere.

Officials in Tianjin are seeking consensus on climate funding for developing countries, policies and funds to protect carbon-absorbing forests, and transfers of green technology.

They hope that a higher level meeting in Cancun, Mexico, late this year can then settle the foundations of a binding pact that could be agreed in 2011.

Fraught negotiations last year failed to agree on a binding treaty and culminated in a bitter meeting in Copenhagen, which produced a non-binding accord that later recorded the emissions pledges of participant countries.

TOUGH GOAL

Su told reporters that the question of wealthy countries' emissions targets could not be avoided at Cancun, although it was good that rich nations had offered emissions cut goals as part of the Copenhagen Accord, he added.

"But these goals are certainly still far removed from the expectations of developing countries and from what is required according to science," he added.

A negotiator from another big developing country said prospects for Cancun were uncertain.

"I don't think it's going particularly fast or well so far," the delegate said of the Tianjin meeting. He spoke on condition of anonymity, citing the internal nature of the talks.

"It's hard to see how we can get a really substantive outcome from here into Mexico."

The United Nations says the current targets would not prevent a temperature rise of more than 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 F), which the EU and some experts call the threshold of dangerous climate change, such as more extreme droughts, floods and rising sea levels. [ID:nSGE69003V]

Under the Copenhagen Accord, supported by more than 110 countries, parties agreed to limit warming to below 2 degrees Celsius from pre-industrial levels but didn't specify a date.

Su did not say what specific demands, if any, China could make over developed economies' emissions goals.

President Barack Obama wants to cut the United States' greenhouse gas emissions by 17 percent by 2020 from 2005 levels, or 4 percent from 1990 levels. But legislation to that end has failed to win the backing of the U.S. Senate.

The European Union has offered to cut emissions by 20 percent by 2020, compared to 1990 levels, or 30 percent if others act.

Many Western governments want China to take on firmer international commitments eventually to cap emissions.

China's emissions could peak some time between 2020 and 2030, with the right mix of green policies, a Chinese government expert on energy policy, Jiang Kejun, told reporters in Tianjin.

Jiang, a researcher at the Energy Research Institute in Beijing, did not give a precise estimate of how high China's emissions could rise, but said the Copenhagen Accord yardstick for limiting global emissions would be difficult to achieve.

"The two-degrees scenario is very tough for China," he said. (Editing by David Fogarty)

Europe, Asia call for urgent 'binding' climate deal
Yahoo News 5 Oct 10;

BRUSSELS (AFP) – Two months before a key UN climate conference, European and Asian leaders pledged Tuesday to seek an urgent, legally-binding deal on global warming that would include deep cuts in emissions.

"They shared the goal of reaching urgently a fair, effective and comprehensive legally binding outcome," said a final statement approved at the 46-nation Asia-Europe Meeting (ASEM) held in Brussels.

"Leaders agreed that deep cuts in global emissions are required, recognising the scientific view that the increase in global temperature should be below two degrees Celsius," the text said.

The pledge, however, lacks any deadline or timeline for achieving this goal.

The ASEM summit grouped the 27-nation European Union, the 10-member Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN), as well as Australia, China, Japan, South Korea, India, Pakistan, Mongolia, New Zealand and Russia.

The ASEM statement came as delegates from more than 170 countries met in the northern Chinese city of Tianjin this week in an effort to break the stalemate ahead of the next United Nations conference.

The UN climate meeting will take place between November 29 and December 10 in Cancun, Mexico, one year after the much-criticised meeting in Copenhagen.

Major carbon emitters including the United States and China remain far apart on climate change.

Hopes are low that any binding deals on cutting greenhouse gas emissions can be reached at the talks in the Mexican resort amid lingering bitterness following Copenhagen.

The Copenhagen conference last December agreed on the goal of capping global temperature rises at 2.0 degree Celsius (3.6 degree Fahrenheit) and pledged 100 billion dollars a year to help poor countries cope with climate change.

But it failed to muster the requisite emissions-reduction commitments from carbon producers or specify who would provide the mitigation funds.

Major emerging nations such as China and India also have resisted legally binding requirements to cut emissions, saying rich countries are historically responsible for global warming and must take the lead.


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