UN urges action against forced labour

Victoria Tauli-Corpuz Photo: UNThe indigenous peoples of the Chaco region of neighbouring Bolivia and Paraguay are often trapped into forced labour practices and face discrimination, severe poverty and in some cases systematic violence, the United Nations reported today, calling on the two countries to take urgent action to protect those groups’ human rights.

The UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues voiced grave concern today as it released the reports from the recent visits to Bolivia and Paraguay of a mission comprising Permanent Forum members as well as experts from a series of UN agencies and departments.

The mission found that while the Governments of the two countries have taken some steps to deal with the problem of forced labour, additional and immediate action is necessary, given the severity of the situation.

Victoria Tauli-Corpuz, Chairperson of the Permanent Forum, said the mission found that a response is needed both at the national level and across international borders to help the indigenous of the Chaco, a relatively arid and remote plain in central South America.

“A strong message must be sent by the two national governments to the local governments and land owners of the Chaco region,” she said. “It is unacceptable for any sector of society to be subjected to forced labour and other abuses.”

The report calls on Bolivia and Paraguay to establish sufficient State institutions in the areas where forced labour is prevalent to ensure that domestic and international labour laws are actually enforced, appropriate rural development is undertaken and critical social services such as health care and education are in place.

“International law and national policies must be strongly enforced not only by national governments, but also at the level of local government where, at the very best, the message of anti-discrimination is not getting through, and at worst is being actively opposed,” Ms. Tauli-Corpuz noted.

She said that while the forced labour of the Guaraní and other indigenous peoples has long been documented, those groups “face severe poverty, lack food and water security and are confronted with a series of human rights abuses related to land rights, child labour, freedom of association and discrimination. In some areas, those seeking to defend their rights were the target of systematic violence and threats.”

The Chairperson stressed that efforts to tackle the problems faced by the indigenous peoples of the Chaco “must be undertaken with their free, prior and informed consent, and must also include restoration of territorial and land rights for indigenous peoples, and the promotion and application of the principle of non-discrimination in all spheres of life of indigenous peoples.”

The Permanent Forum is an advisory to the UN Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC), and is tasked with discussing indigenous issues as they relate to economic and social development, culture, the environment, education, health and human rights.

The mission to Bolivia and Paraguay, which took place in April and May, included experts from the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), the International Labour Organisation (ILO), the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), the UN Development Programme (UNDP) and the UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs (DESA).

South-East Asian meeting to discuss green strategies

Photo: Wikimedia CommonsGovernment officials from across South-East Asia have gathered in western Thailand for a six-day United Nations seminar on how countries can implement low-carbon strategies that will also boost economic growth.

Participants at the seminar will discuss green growth, sustainable consumption and production, eco-efficiency, green taxes, budget reform and other environmental and economic issues, according to a press release issued by the UN Economic and Social Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP).

Officials will have the opportunity to view first-hand sustainable business practices, engage in mock negotiations and policy exercises and share country experiences about how to respond to current economic and climate crises.

“Our message of low-carbon green growth can only remain credible when we actually walk the talk by supporting green businesses, eco-tourism and low-carbon solutions in our own procurement decisions,” said Masakazu Ichimura, the chief of ESCAP’s environment and development section.

The seminar, which runs until Saturday, is taking place at an eco-resort in Thailand’s Kanchanaburi province that showcases rainwater harvesting, recycling, organic rice farming and biogas digesting.

Organised by ESCAP along with the United Kingdom, the China Standard Certification Centre and the Regional Help Desk on Sustainable Consumption and Production for Asia and the Pacific, it will be carbon-neutral by offsetting emissions from travel and accommodation with the organisation Plant-A-Tree-Today.org.

Extreme poverty: Zambia needs to move "from rhetoric to action"

Photo: Florence Devouard/Wikimedia Commons"Effectively addressing extreme poverty in Zambia requires moving from rhetoric to action," said the United Nations Independent Expert on human rights and extreme poverty, Magdalena Sepúlveda, at the end of her visit to the country, the first mission of a UN human rights expert to Zambia.

"Zambia is a country rich in natural resources that experienced significant economic growth in the last 8 years. Nevertheless, it was appalling to see the persistence of extreme poverty in different regions of the country," stressed the UN expert sharing some of her preliminary findings at a press conference in Lusaka.

Ms. Sepúlveda met with various Government authorities, international organisations and NGOs, and visited communities living in poverty in Chipata, Chirundu, Katete and the Zambian capital. "In my visits to communities I learnt about the daily struggle for survival by people living in extremely difficult conditions. The Government has made clear commitments and outlined important plans to change this situation, but words must be translated into more actions."

The expert, who was briefed on the ongoing review of the Constitution by the National Constitution Conference, pointed out that this process is a unique opportunity to bring the Zambian legal framework in line with international human rights commitments made by the country. "Access to health, housing, education and social security are all universal human rights that must be incorporated into the Bill of Rights," said Ms. Sepúlveda.

According to the expert, improving law is important, "but it is not sufficient". In her view, poverty will not be reduced in Zambia until poor people are placed at the centre of national policies planning and if resources to social protection are not ensured. "The extremely poor must be the number one priority of the State budget," she stressed.

Ms. Sepulveda saw first-hand the remarkable impact of pilot programmes of social cash transfer in urban and rural communities, which benefit households unable to undertake any income generating activity. "Without social cash transfers, older people, women and children would be virtually abandoned to their fate," said the expert. "I was extremely pleased to hear that the Government has decided to scale-up these programmes."

The independent expert fully acknowledged the resources constraints of the Government and encouraged international donors to support social protection programmes in Zambia. Nonetheless, she also stressed that the Government still can do much more with the limited resources that it has. "Governments must closely assess the allocation of public spending and fiercely combat corruption".

The expert stressed that transparency, accountability and participation are indispensable for effective poverty reduction policies. "Civil society has a crucial role in the struggle against poverty, it should not only actively participate in the design process but also be able to monitor and evaluate what is being done."

In this sense, Ms. Sepulveda expressed concern about the impact that the recently adopted NGO Act may have in restricting the independence of NGOs and subjecting them to excessive controls. She also called for enhanced support to the Human Rights Commission and the immediate adoption of the Anti Corruption Statute and an access to information act.

As a result of this visit, the expert will prepare a report that will be presented at the UN Human Rights Council in June 2010, describing her main findings and providing recommendations on the enhancement of the human rights situation of people living in extreme poverty.

Emission decline in EU: EEA estimates

New European Environment Agency (EEA) estimates indicate that EU greenhouse gas emissions decreased in 2008 for the fourth consecutive year. Compared to the 2007 official emissions published earlier this year, the annual reduction is estimated to be about 1.3 per cent for the EU-15 and 1.5 per cent for the EU-27.

Based on these estimates, the greenhouse gas emissions in 2008 stand approximately 6.2 per cent below the Kyoto base-year emissions for the EU-15, and 10.7 per cent below the 1990 level for the EU-27.The vast majority of the decline in emissions in 2008 was due to lower CO2 emissions from fossil fuel combustion in the energy, industry and transport sectors.

The 2008 emission reductions reflect the effects of the global economic recession which began in 2008, which resulted in reduced industrial output and reduced energy consumption by industry, and correspondingly reduced freight transport. The reductions are also apparent in the verified emissions from EU ETS (Emission Trading Scheme) for 2008, where total EU-27 emissions decreased by 3.9 per cent between 2007 and 2008.

This is the first time that EEA has produced EU-wide estimates of total greenhouse gas emissions just months after the year in question. The EEA estimates do not take into account the effects of changes in land use. They are based on the publicly available verified EU ETS emissions for 2008 and other national and European sources, available as of mid-July 2009. The detailed EEA methodology will be published in the coming weeks.

These 2008 emission estimates will be used to better track progress towards EU targets in the annual EEA report on greenhouse gas emission trends and projections in Europe, which will be published later this year.

The official 2008 greenhouse gas emissions for the EU will be available in June 2010, when the EEA publishes the EU Greenhouse Gas Inventory 1990–2008 and Inventory Report 2010, to be submitted to the UNFCCC.

EU's roadmap to measure wellbeing beyond GDP

The European Commission has published a roadmap for developing new environmental and social indicators to measure the real prosperity and wellbeing of nations beyond traditional GDP. The reflections could affect the strategic goals of the post-2010 Lisbon Strategy for growth and jobs.

GDP growth is the main indicator for measuring the effectiveness of recovery plans launched last year to restore economic growth. However, "there is a clear case for complementing GDP with statistics covering the other economic, social and environmental issues on which people's well-being critically depends," according to a Commission communication GDP and beyond - Measuring progress in a changing world, adopted on August 20.

The proposal follows a 2007 Commission conference, which revealed strong support from policymakers, economic, social and environmental experts and civil society for developing such indicators to complement GDP.

The document identifies action to be taken to develop such more 'inclusive' indicators. It will officially be presented on September 8.

According to the EU executive, the reflection could also "contribute to setting new strategic goals for the post-2010 Lisbon Strategy".

"The special importance of this system is that it would include stock-taking of natural resources and human and social capital, rather than just the use of these resources. The system would also focus on the role of eco-systems in providing welfare," declared the Commission upon announcing the initiative in 2007.

Among the five primary initiatives planned by the EU executive are developing a comprehensive environmental index and improving quality-of-life indicators to complement GDP.

Environmental pressure index ready by 2010

Ecological and carbon footprints are "close candidates" for developing indicators for a comprehensive environmental index to complement GDP, according to the Commission. But it stresses that "both are limited in scope," as the carbon footprint only takes into account greenhouse gas emissions and the ecological footprint excludes any impact on water, for example.

A pilot version of an index to measure pollution and other environmental harm within EU territory is due to be published in 2010. It will help assess the results of environmental protection efforts in the following fields:

*Climate change and energy use;

*nature and biodiversity;

*air pollution and health impacts;

*water use and pollution, and;

*waste generation and use of resources.

Other initiatives proposed include developing a European Sustainable Development
Scoreboard, a pilot version of which should be ready this year, to allow better monitoring of progress made regarding the EU's sustainable development strategy.

Another related measure is developing threshold values for environmental sustainability, which should allow policymakers to identify 'danger zones' or alert levels before nature's physical limits are reached. The values will be identified for key pollutants and all renewable resources.

New energy-from-waste incinerator planned in U.K.

Plans for a new energy-from-waste (EfW) incinerator to be based at the Newhurst Quarry in Leicestershire, England, have been revealed by waste-management company Biffa Limited (High Wycombe, England). The energy-recovery facility will generate 21 megawatts (MW) of electricity for 42,000 homes by processing 300,000 tonnes of waste annually.

Biffa is one of three firms shortlisted by Leicestershire County Council for the procurement of a 25-year contract to deal with the area's residual waste. The EfW incinerator will be the company's first project of this type and will occupy a site that has already been granted planning permission for a waste treatment plant.

The EfW plant will use technology from Swiss thermal technology company Von Roll Inova (Zurich), which has built nearly 400 energy recovery plants worldwide. The system reduces the volume of waste that would otherwise go to landfill by up to 95per cent. According to Biffa, the plant will deal with 180,000 tonnes of household waste per year, alongside 120,000 tonnes of business waste.

"Waste should be seen as a resource," said Biffa CEO Andre Horbach. "Our view is that it should be recycled wherever possible and the remaining material used to generate energy."

Waste will be delivered to a reception area of the building, and automated conveyors will transfer it to the combustion chamber, where the heat will produce steam to power the generators. Biffa said the facility will incorporate all required environmental and air pollution control systems to ensure emissions are well within legal limits. Ash from the combustion process will be recycled as aggregates for the building and construction industry, while separate fly ash will be taken offsite for disposal.

According to Biffa Development Director Simon Allin, "Whilst our original plans for this site are still viable, technology has progressed, and the Leicestershire procurement process makes an energy plant totally viable. We are so convinced of its benefits that even if we were not successful in gaining the Council waste contract, we would still progress this plant for the region's business waste. This is an excellent opportunity to move away from landfill and all its associated environmental issues and provide a modern energy recovery facility on a site which is already established as being suitable for waste management on a similar scale."

EfW plants are cropping up more frequently in the U.K. The government recently granted permission to Peel Environmental to construct a 95-MW EfW facility in Cheshire that will burn 600,000 tonnes of waste each year.

Suffolk County Council recently announced plans with Entec UK Limited (Newcastle upon Tyne, United Kingdom), to build a GBP200 million (USD327 million) energy-from-waste facility in Great Blakenham, near Ipswich. The 25-MW facility will handle 250,000 tons per year of municipal waste.

IIR's Renewable Energy Database provides extensive coverage on the Wind Energy, Geothermal, Hydroelectric, Landfill Gas-to-Energy and Utility-Scale Solar power plants throughout North America, and now expanding coverage across the world.

Industrial Info Resources (IIR) is the leading provider of global market intelligence specialising in the industrial process, heavy manufacturing and energy related markets. For more than 26 years, Industrial Info has provided plant and project opportunity databases, market forecasts, high resolution maps, and daily industry news.

Natural gas power plant to come up in Ireland

Lumcloon Energy Limited (Tulamoore, Ireland), a joint venture between two Irish companies, R&R Mechanical Limited and Terotech International Limited, was founded to develop a natural gas-fired power plant at a Brownfield site formerly occupied by a peat-powered power station in Lumcloon, County Offaly.

Lumcloon Energy has obtained a ruling that the proposal to build a 250-megawatt (MW) combined-cycle gas turbine (CCGT), a 100-MW single-cycle power generation plant, and a Research & Development Centre at the site of power utility Electrical Security Board's former peat-power plant in Lumcloon is of strategic national importance.

In effect, these will fast-track the project through the planning phases. Plans reportedly have been lodged with governmental planning board An Bord Pleanala and will undergo a five-day validation exercise, before being made public in early September. Final approval is targeted for early 2010.

Both power units will have gas turbines with diesel supply backup, and onsite storage of diesel will amount to 5,200 cubic metres of tankage. Additionally, the CCGT will have a steam turbine. The associated R&D facility will develop a novel air-cooled condenser system called 'MACC,' which is believed to be a more efficient system than most available. The plant is slated for completion by late 2012.

The CCGT will have two gas turbines and one steam turbine; the MACC air-cooled condenser system; and diesel fuel storage liquids for fuel and effluent handling. The peaking plant will require a gas turbine, pipe work, diesel storage tanks, pumps, valves, control and instrumentation, and grid connection.

Riding the growth wave with green technology and innovation

Co-located with the Growth, Innovation and Leadership Global Congress on Corporate Growth (GIL 2009: Asia Pacific), Frost & Sullivan's executive symposium titled the Global Green Revolution 2009 will be held on Thursday, October 15, 2009 in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. The symposium will discuss smart strategies for businesses to seize new opportunities to grow revenue and customer loyalty in today's global green economy.

"Creating and delivering sustainable products and solutions is no more a matter of choice, but has become a competitive strategy of organisations," says Ravi Krishnaswamy, Director, Energy & Power Systems, Frost & Sullivan. "The quest for green technology and sustainable development is leading to a convergence of interest among a multitude of industries. While this is creating new opportunities, new application platforms and innovative business models, it is also redrawing industry boundaries and redefining competition and partnership."

The Global Green Revolution 2009 will feature keynotes, live interviews, success stories, roundtables, and case studies on strategic issues that point out real market opportunities for integrating green strategy into business plans.

Globally celebrated green thought-leaders, like Andy Ridley, Executive Director and Co-founder, Earth Hour, World Wildlife Fund and Matthias Gelber, Board Member, Maleki GmbH, Malaysia will share their thoughts on green practices and opportunities available to businesses. Other key personalities attending the symposium include senior executives from Philippine Bio Science Company, Cosmo Biofuels, SunTech and Chevron, amongst others.

Frost & Sullivan will honour companies across industries that have proved to be leaders in sustainable technology at the 2009 Green Excellence Awards luncheon reception which will be held at the symposium.

Frost & Sullivan awards seek to identify and credit sustainable best practices in the industry segments and are synonymous with Frost & Sullivan's in-depth analysis and coverage of these industries. In keeping with the company's commitment to excellence and innovation, the Green Excellence Awards are carefully reviewed and evaluated to reflect the current market landscape inclusive of the emerging technology trends.

Recycled water to Barossa vineyards

New ways to tackle the challenges of climate change are being evolved across the globe. Water is a major issue to be resolved. Climate change creates acute water scarcity which demands urgent attention.

Australian Minister for Climate Change and Water, Senator Penny Wong, has launched a new project to provide recycled water to vignerons and irrigators in the Barossa region while helping to reduce pressure on the River Murray.

The Water Reuse Project – a partnership between Barossa Infrastructure Ltd and the Barossa Council at Nurioopta – has been supported with AUD599,000 of Australian Government funding from the Water Smart Australia program. The total cost is AUD2.44 million.

“As we tackle the effects of drought and climate change, we need to look to at new ways of using available water resources more efficiently,” Senator Wong said during a visit to the Barossa.

“The Barossa Water Reuse Project is an excellent example of industry working with various levels of government to identify innovative solutions to local water needs.

“The project will reduce Barossa grape growers’ reliance on the River Murray and provide an environmentally sound use for the treated water from the Council’s Community Wastewater Management Scheme.”

The project involves construction of 12 km of connecting pipeline and a pumping station to initially take 285 megalitres per year of recycled water from a new treatment and storage lagoon at the Nuriootpa wastewater treatment plant to vignerons and irrigators. This will eventually be increased to 600 megalitres per year.

This scheme is due to be completed by the end of October 2009, weather permitting.

The project aligns with the Rudd Government’s four key priorities under the Water for the Future initiative of taking action on climate change, using water wisely, securing water supplies and supporting healthy rivers.

The Australian Government contribution to the project comes from AUD20 million provided for enhancing the management and recycling of waste water within South Australia under the overarching Statewide Wastewater Recycling Project.

The Statewide Wastewater Recycling project totals AUD240 million with funding of AUD20 million from the Water Smart Australia program, AUD180 million from South Australian local government and AUD40 million from the South Australian government for new Community Wastewater Management Schemes over the next 10 years.

To help South Australian cities and towns secure their water supplies, the Australian Government is already providing AUD137 million for stormwater recycling and wastewater harvesting projects in the state, as well as committing AUD328 million towards the Adelaide desalination plant.

Danish fishers set anchor on certification

Danish fishers has announced they planned to adhere to the internationally-recognised marine stewardship standards, putting a stop to years of overfishing and bycatch.

The Danish Fishermen's Association declared that all fish from Danish fisheries will be certified according to standards set by the Marine Stewardship Council by 2012.

"The Danish fishermen are now taking a huge step towards securing that Danish fisheries in the future will be sustainable,” says Espen Tind Nordberg, programme manager for sustainable consumption at WWF Denmark.

“This is an announcement we have been demanding for years. Now the fishermen deserve true recognition and support to implement their ambitious plan.”

Only 52 fisheries are certified according to MSC's standards. Three of these fisheries are Danish. The Danish Fishermen’s Association aims to certify more than 30 fisheries, which on a global scale is a positive development.

Three of the most important fisheries in Demark, plaice, eastern Baltic Sea cod and Saithe, are ready to enter full assessment. Meanwhile, the pre-assessment process is being undertaken for the remaining fisheries.

For several years, WWF has been promoting the MSC programme as the most environmentally friendly choice in producing seafood and now both consumers and large retailers are increasingly starting to demand MSC certified fish.

"The European and North American markets are experiencing a trend where the MSC certification is becoming a market requirement” said Nordberg. “The fact that Danish fishermen are now stepping up to the challenge is good news for fishstocks and marine ecosystems, and may also help to boost Danish export of fish and jobs in the processing sector.”.

However, the ambitious decision from the Danish fishing industry cannot stand alone. To truly document sustainability of such a large number of fisheries requires political support.

"MSC is the most ambitious and trustworthy certification scheme which is currently available, partly because it creates incentives for the fishermen to constantly raise the performance bar,” Nordberg said. “But the objective will never materialise if the responsible ministers keep deciding unsustainable quotas”.


Tata for talks on controversial project

Olive Ridley sea turtle laying eggs. Photo: Wikimedia CommonsThe project in Orissa threatens Olive Ridley Sea Turtles

Tata Group chairman Ratan Tata has agreed to meet Greenpeace representatives for talks on the Orissa Dhamra port-Olive Ridley Sea Turtle controversy. Both sides would fix a date for the meeting.

The Dhamra port in Orissa is being constructed by the Dhamra Port Company Limited (DPCL), a 50:50 joint venture between Tata Steel and L&T. The project has generated a storm of criticism for potential impact on the Olive Ridley Sea Turtle at the Gahirmatha and Bhitarkanika sanctuaries.

The port’s location has been of concern for years to conservationists, scientists, turtle experts, and local and national fisher groups, all of who have opposed it. They say an environment impact assessment (EIA) for the project has not been satisfactorily conducted.

Since inception, the project clashed with the habitat of the Olive Ridley Sea turtle, an endangered species and accorded Schedule I status in India, on par with the tiger.

The nesting beaches at Gahirmatha are among the world’s largest and last mass-nesting grounds for the species.

A four-month dialogue between the promoters of Dhamra and NGOs including Greenpeace India stalled in February this year after Tata Steel refused to suspend construction and commission an independent assessment of impact.

This was the third consecutive year that Greenpeace India had raised the issue at a Tata AGM. Last year, Greenpeace India campaigners had taken part in several protests to ask Ratan Tata to stop the construction of the port, even blockading the group’s Bombay House headquarters.

NGOs including Greenpeace India have been campaigning for years for an independent environment assessment, the results of which would determine the future of the project.

The protests have largely been ignored, and DPCL had said construction could be completed by April 2010. Since 2008, an online Greenpeace India campaign has resulted in over a lakh letters to Ratan Tata asking him to stop the Dhamra project.

Tata for talks on controversial project

Photo: Wikimedia CommonsThe project in Orissa threatens Olive Ridley Sea Turtles

Tata Group chairman Ratan Tata has agreed to meet Greenpeace representatives for talks on the Orissa Dhamra port-Olive Ridley Sea Turtle controversy. Both sides would fix a date for the meeting.

The Dhamra port in Orissa is being constructed by the Dhamra Port Company Limited (DPCL), a 50:50 joint venture between Tata Steel and L&T. The project has generated a storm of criticism for potential impact on the Olive Ridley Sea Turtle at the Gahirmatha and Bhitarkanika sanctuaries.

The port’s location has been of concern for years to conservationists, scientists, turtle experts, and local and national fisher groups, all of who have opposed it. They say an environment impact assessment (EIA) for the project has not been satisfactorily conducted.

Since inception, the project clashed with the habitat of the Olive Ridley Sea turtle, an endangered species and accorded Schedule I status in India, on par with the tiger.

The nesting beaches at Gahirmatha are among the world’s largest and last mass-nesting grounds for the species.

A four-month dialogue between the promoters of Dhamra and NGOs including Greenpeace India stalled in February this year after Tata Steel refused to suspend construction and commission an independent assessment of impact.

This was the third consecutive year that Greenpeace India had raised the issue at a Tata AGM. Last year, Greenpeace India campaigners had taken part in several protests to ask Ratan Tata to stop the construction of the port, even blockading the group’s Bombay House headquarters.

NGOs including Greenpeace India have been campaigning for years for an independent environment assessment, the results of which would determine the future of the project.

The protests have largely been ignored, and DPCL had said construction could be completed by April 2010. Since 2008, an online Greenpeace India campaign has resulted in over a lakh letters to Ratan Tata asking him to stop the Dhamra project.

Siemens invests in Israeli solar company

Siemens will invest USD15 million in Arava Power Company, the Israeli solar power plants company. As part of the agreement Siemens will hold 40 per cent stake in the company. Arava Power develops, builds and operates photovoltaic plants in Israel.

The equity investment will make it possible to build Israel’s first commercial solar farms, to be located in the region between the Dead Sea and the Red Sea.

“Thanks to its intensive sunshine and steadily growing demand for energy, Israel is an ideal location for further developing our solar business,” said Peter Löscher, President and CEO of Siemens AG.

The investment is aimed at constructing the solar fields with a significant proportion of Siemens know-how, delivering technology, inverter and transformers, ensuring new projects for the group. As Engineering Procurement Construction (EPC) contractor, Siemens will handle project management including engineering and construction of the photovoltaic plants.

Overall, Siemens has concluded a framework agreement to build solar plants with a total output of 40 megawatts (MW). The first project will be the construction of a plant with an output of up to 4.9 MW at Kibbutz Ketura, in the southern desert of Israel. Additional photovoltaic plants are already being planned for the Negev and Arava deserts and Israel’s aim is to meet around ten per cent of its total energy needs with renewable energy plants by 2020.

“This is the most comprehensive foreign investment to date for an Israeli solar energy firm,” said Johannes Schmidt, CEO of the Equity & Project Finance unit of Siemens Financial Services. “Through its early and extensive engagement in the field, Arava Power has developed into Israel’s leading solar energy company. Siemens will be supporting local solar projects with our full range of technologies, know-how and finance.”

Jonathan Cohen, CEO of Arava Power, said: “Our strategic partnership will make it possible for our country to reach its ambitious goals of clean air and renewable energy even faster.”

NASA satellite sees Hurricane Jimena explode in strength over 4 days

Hurricane Warnings are up for the southern Baja California, as powerful Category Four Hurricane Jimena threatens. Jimena developed over the weekend, and the infrared instrument on NASA's Aqua satellite captured that explosive development.

A hurricane warning is in effect for the southern portion of the Baja California peninsula from Bahia Magdalena southward on the west coast...and from San Evaristo southward on the east coast, including Cabo San Lucas. Hurricane conditions are expected in the Warning area within 24 hours.

NASA's Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) instrument captured the explosive growth of Hurricane Jimena in the Eastern Pacific Ocean from August 27-30, 2009.

On August 27, Jimena was a low pressure area and AIRS showed lower cloud tops and a disorganised system. On August 28, AIRS captured Jimena when she became Tropical Depression 13-E. By 2 a.m. EDT August 29, Jimena was a Tropical Storm, and AIRS saw a better organised, more rounded storm with growing thunderstorms. By 8 p.m. EDT August 29, Jimena became a Hurricane. By 1:30 p.m. August 30, Hurricane Jimena strengthened to a Category Four Hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Scale and AIRS revealed towering thunderstorms around her center of circulation.

In infrared imagery, NASA's false-colored purple clouds are as cold as or colder than 220 Kelvin or minus 63 degrees Fahrenheit (F). The blue-colored clouds are about 240 Kelvin, or minus 27F. Today's satellite imagery indicated Jimena's cloud top temperatures were colder than minus 63F indicating powerful thunderstorms in her center.

At 11 a.m. EDT today, August 31, Jimena had maximum sustained winds near 145 mph making her a powerful Category Four hurricane on the Saffir-Simpson Scale (It is 10 mph under Category Five status). Jimena is a compact storm, with hurricane force winds only extending only 30 miles out, and tropical storm force winds out to 80 miles from the center.

Her center was about 355 miles south-southeast of Cabo San Lucas, Mexico, near 18.0 north and 108.3 west. She was moving northwest near 8 mph, and had a minimum central pressure near 940 millibars.

The National Hurricane Center said in its 11 a.m. EDT update today, "Jimena is expected to produce total rain accumulations of 5 to 10 inches over the southern half of the Baja California peninsula and portions of western Mexico during the next 2 days, with possible isolated maximum amounts of 15 inches. A storm surge along with large and dangerous battering waves will produce significant coastal flooding along the Baja California peninsula."

Training students to tackle food systems, poverty problems

Although farming and food distribution improvements have increased the quality of life in Asia, Europe and North America, 2.6 billion people still live on less than USD2 a day and suffer from chronic extreme poverty.

A new Cornell University program funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF) will train a cadre of graduate students to use interdisciplinary approaches to tackle food systems and agricultural problems that contribute to extreme poverty.

A five-year, USD3.2 million NSF grant will support 25 Ph.D. students for two years each in the Food Systems and Poverty Reduction Integrative Graduate Education and Research Training (IGERT) program, administered through the Cornell International Institute for Food, Agriculture and Development. The NSF IGERT grant, in turn, is funded through federal stimulus money from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, intended to spur economic development by expanding educational opportunities, among other things.

Open to U.S. citizens and permanent residents, the program is scheduled to begin in August 2010 with more than 20 graduate fields participating. The curriculum will include a seminar series; field research in Kenya and Ethiopia to study both highland and dryland agricultural systems in collaboration with partners at Bahir Dar University in Ethiopia and the International Livestock Research Institute; and a three-semester core course sequence that takes interdisciplinary approaches to addressing such problems as water shortages, climate change and vulnerability to food systems, soil degradation, pests and diseases, and food supply chains.

"The idea behind the program is to expose students to different disciplinary approaches to the same problem," said Chris Barrett, the Steven B. and Janice G.
Ashley Professor of Applied Economics and Management and the program's principal investigator. "If you are tackling issues related to pests and disease, for example, a food scientist's approach will be different from [that of] a plant pathologist or an entomologist."

Students will also learn to use and link together new concepts and computer modeling techniques applied by different disciplines for more integrated and dynamic insights on these issues. For example, if researchers want to study problems of maintaining a small but productive farm, they must integrate information relating to soils, crop selection, fertiliser use, livestock, water management and more.

A fortnightly seminar series will include talks by Cornell and other food experts. During weeks between those talks, professional development seminars will teach students such skills as how to write grant proposals, make effective presentations, manage data, uphold research ethics and work in a multicultural field setting.

"Some of the biggest challenges facing society revolve around poverty, food and the environment, areas that have been hallmarks of graduate Cornell training for years," said Barrett. "This program will deepen that training and stitch together interdisciplinary approaches."

Co-principal investigators include Rebecca Nelson, associate professor of plant breeding and genetics and of plant pathology and plant-microbe biology; Alice Pell, professor of animal science and vice provost for international relations; Per Pinstrup-Andersen, the H.E. Babcock Professor of Food, Nutrition and Public Policy; and Alison Power, professor of ecology and evolutionary biology and dean of the Graduate School.

Mexican wolf pack left to roam wild

The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has decided to spare the Middle Fork Pack of endangered Mexican gray wolves from removal from the wild, despite their having killed five head of cattle on the Gila National Forest, in a second heartening instance of the agency stepping back from Bush-era persecution of the animals regarded as North America’s most imperiled mammals.

The Middle Fork Pack consists of two three-legged adult wolves, who each lost one leg as a result of stepping into privately set leghold traps, a yearling from last year, and four pups born this spring. This family group is one of a maximum of three packs in New Mexico that may have reproduced this year.

The Middle Fork wolves live in the heavily grazed Beaverhead area of the Gila National Forest, where, over the past several years, five other wolf packs previously lived until they were trapped out and shot by the federal government in response to pressure from the livestock industry.
“We applaud the Fish and Wildlife Service for making the right decision,” said Michael Robinson of the Center for Biological Diversity.

“Lackadaisical Forest Service management, severe grazing during drought, trespass stock, and scattered carcasses of cattle that died of non-wolf causes that draw wolves in to scavenge all guarantee continued conflicts between wolves and livestock,” pointed out Robinson.

The Beaverhead area has a history of wolves scavenging on carcasses of cattle that they had not killed, and then subsequently beginning to hunt live cattle. This spring, the Center for Biological Diversity documented 16 dead cattle, none of them with any signs of wolf predation, within a few miles of the Middle Fork’s den site.

Independent scientists have repeatedly recommended that owners of livestock using the public lands be required to remove or render unpalatable (as by lime, for example) the carcasses of cattle and horses that die of non-wolf causes – such as starvation, disease, or poisonous weeds – before wolves scavenge on them and then switch from preying on elk to livestock. No such requirements have been implemented.

“Preventing conflicts with livestock on the national forests makes more sense than scapegoating endangered wolves once conflicts begin,” said Robinson.

Overall, elk, deer, and other native hoofed mammals comprise 88.6 per cent of the Mexican wolves’ diets, and cattle just 4.2 per cent, according to a peer-reviewed 2006 study based on analysis of the wolves’ scat.

Last year, in the entirety of New Mexico and Arizona, only 52 wolves and just two breeding pairs survived. A new count will take place in January 2010.

Before the reintroduction began in 1998, the Fish and Wildlife Service projected that by 2006 the wolf population in the Gila and Apache national forests in, respectively, New Mexico and Arizona, would grow to 102 wolves including 18 breeding pairs. Instead, government shooting of 11 wolves, inadvertent killing of 18 wolves as a result of capture, and catching and not releasing an additional 37 wolves has stymied population growth.

The Fish and Wildlife Service decision contradicted a recommendation by the Arizona Department of Game and Fish, which chairs the interagency Mexican Wolf Adaptive Management Oversight Committee, to remove one of the adult wolves. The New Mexico Game and Fish Department supported leaving the wolves in the wild.

This June, Arizona Department of Game and Fish recommended removing another wolf in New Mexico “by the most efficient means available,” a euphemism for aerial shooting. The Fish and Wildlife Service also subsequently spared that animal, who is still in the wild and has not been implicated in any additional killings of livestock.

UN calls for climate change action

The UN is calling for millions of online signatures for a climate petition and is launching the first-ever Global Climate Week as part of its Seal the Deal! campaign, 100 days ahead of a crucial UN climate change summit in Copenhagen (COP 15) in December.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is leading the call for communities around the world to take advantage of Global Climate Week from September 21-25 to encourage leaders to seal a fair, balanced and effective agreement on climate change.

"Time is running out. Scientists warn that climate impacts are accelerating. Now more than ever, we need political leadership at the highest level to ensure we protect people and the planet, and to catalyse the green growth that can power the 21st century economy," the UN Secretary-General stressed.

"With just 15 negotiating days remaining before the start of COP15, now is the time for people in every corner of the world to urge their governments to seal a fair, effective and ambitious deal in Copenhagen," he added.

On 1 September, Ban will visit a Norwegian island deep inside the Arctic Circle near the North Pole to witness the problem of glacial melt and other climate change impacts.

Global Climate Week will coincide with the Secretary-General's Summit on Climate Change at UN Headquarters in New York on September 22, one day ahead of the annual General Assembly meeting.

Among the events planned for more than 120 countries are youth assemblies, tree planting drives, a climate neutral day and a 'Go Green Day'. New York and other cities around the world have set up a full programme for the week.

"A scientifically credible deal in Copenhagen can catalyse a transition to a low carbon, resource-efficient Green Economy which is so essential on a planet of six billion people, rising to over nine billion by 2050. As such, it will represent perhaps the biggest and most far reaching stimulus package of 2009 and beyond," added Achim Steiner, UN Under-Secretary General and Executive Director of the UN Environment Programme (UNEP).

Communities, businesses and individuals can add their voices to the Seal the Deal! campaign during Global Climate Week by signing the Climate Petition at www.sealthedeal2009.org to coalesce millions of signatures.

The Climate Petition is a consolidation of appeals supported by the UN Seal the Deal! campaign. The petition will be presented by civil society to the governments of the world in Copenhagen.

The Prime Minister of Thailand, Abhisit Vejjajiva, the President of Ethiopia, Dr. Girma Woldegiorgis and the Prime Minister of the Republic of Korea, Han Seung-soo and Nobel Laureate Wangari Maathai are amongst those who have lent their support to campaign.

The campaign has also attracted the support of Austrian pop group My Excellence with a song called "Come On (Seal the Deal)", performed for the first time live on August 28 in a ceremony at the Vienna office of UN.


Canadian support for Paraguayan rural women farmers

The Honourable Vic Toews, President of the Treasury Board, on behalf of the Honourable Beverley J. Oda, Minister of International Cooperation, announced Canada's support of a new project that will advance the objectives of the national development program in four impoverished communities in South America. The project is Building the Capacity of Women Farmers For Their Full Participation in Rural Development. Minister Toews also met with officials from the Paraguayan government and aid organisations.

"The project supports Canada's engagement in the Americas, matching Canadian expertise with NGOs in the region. It will strengthen local communities and promote the economic sustainability of local farmers by encouraging the adoption of sustainable organic agriculture techniques," said Minister Toews.

"Canada's support will benefit women, who have an average of six children each and are their family's main source of support through subsistence farming, earning a daily income of less than one Canadian dollar a day. This project will help them successfully overcome these challenges with new skills, making a real difference in their lives," said Minister Oda. "This project reflects Canada's commitment to effectively increase its support to agriculture with demonstrable results for women and their families living in poverty."

Through the Canadian International Development Agency (CIDA), two Canadian NGOs working with two local Paraguayan organisations in four rural impoverished communities: Caaguazu, Isla Pucu, Santa Ana, and Libertad del Sur, will benefit 30,000 people. The activities include: repairs to a water distribution system to increase access to safe drinking water; workshops on organic agricultural and business practices that will help increase production and revenues for women farmers and improve the quality of nutrition for 3,100 recipients.

Earlier in the day, Minister Toews also visited the Fernheim Coop Dairy Plant. A CIDA-funded project implemented at the dairy plant contributed to improving efficiencies of the processing plant, increasing quality standards of dairy products and achieving quality certification to improve export opportunities.

Asia’s future melts away as climate talks stall

Chota Sigri Landscape Photo:Prakash Rao/WWF-IndiaGreenpeace has placed ice sculptures of 100 children at the Temple of Earth in Beijing, China, symbolising the disappearing future of the more than 1 billion people in Asia who are threatened with water shortages by the changing climate.

Made from glacial melt water from the source of Yangtze, Yellow and Ganges rivers, the melting sculptures mark the start of the 100-day countdown to the United Nations Copenhagen Climate Summit, and the launch of the TckTckTck campaign, which is urging governments to agree a fair, binding and ambitious deal at the Summit.

At the same time, an ice sculpture in the form of the number "100" on a World Map is also being unveiled in New Delhi to show "the world washed away" by glacial melts.

The Temple of Earth used to be where Chinese emperors prayed for the well-being of Earth and good harvests. "We are here today to highlight the catastrophic danger faced by our planet Earth. The disappearance of the Himalayan glaciers threatens the fresh water supply of the one-fifth of the world's population who live in their watershed. If world leaders don't agree to stop runaway climate change, children of today will grow up facing a constant struggle to secure reliable access to drinking water," said Greenpeace China Climate and Energy Campaign Manager Yang Ailun.

"It's real concern about climate change impacts like the threat to our water supply that is driving China and India to pursue a low-carbon development path that balances development and environmental protection," said Greenpeace India Climate and Energy Manager Vinuta Gopal. "If the developed world doesn't take the opportunity to support developing countries to both adapt to and mitigate climate change, then that balance won't hold and we will suffer an environmental catastrophe."

The latest scientific research shows that to avert catastrophic climate impacts, global greenhouse gas emissions need to peak by 2015 and decline after that in order to keep global temperature increase below 2°C. Greenpeace urges developed countries, as a group, to agree to cut emissions by 40per cent below 1990 levels by 2020.

Developing countries must reduce their projected emissions growth by 15-30per cent by 2020. To support these cuts, funding from the developed world of USD 140 billion US dollars a year is needed.

"The future prosperity of India and China is literally melting away," Yang Ailun added. "With only 100 days to go before the Copenhagen Climate Summit, leaders around the world must take personal responsibility for averting climate chaos and stop the greatest threat to all of humanity."

Piranha invasion threatening native fish

Photo: Wikimedia CommonsThe Environment Agency warned of the dangers of releasing non-native species into UK rivers after staff discovered a piranha during a routine river monitoring survey.Environment Agency fisheries specialists spotted a dead piranha in the East Okement tributary of the River Torridge in Devon as they began a survey of fish species using electric fishing equipment.

At 35 cm long, the fearless piranha is commonly found in the Amazon River basin, and is the most ferocious freshwater fish in the world - infamous for its razor sharp teeth and hunting prey in packs.While piranhas would not survive in UK rivers, the introduction of non-native species poses a serious threat to native wildlife.

Floating pennywort (Hydrocotyle ranunculoides), originally from North America, was brought to Britain in the 1980s as a plant for tropical aquaria and garden ponds.

After being released into the wild, it is now starving rivers across the south of England and south Wales of light, nutrients and oxygen. This kills many of the species living in it and also increases the risk of flooding by blocking the waterway.

An autopsy carried out by the Environment Agency found the Piranha’s stomach was full of sweetcorn suggests it might have been kept as a domestic pet. Environment Agency experts believe the piranha was most likely to have been placed in the river once the fish became too large for its tank, and was found dead as the fish could not tolerate the low temperature of the water.

Fish species which the team would commonly expect to find in the river include salmon, brown trout and less commonly the bullhead, stone loach and minnow.

Mark Diamond, Ecology Manager at the Environment Agency, said, "Whilst piranhas can’t survive the colder climates of the UK, this latest find highlights a real issue - that releasing unwanted exotic pets or plants into rivers can have serious consequences for native wildlife.Rather than dumping things in the wild, we would urge people to seek advice about what to do with exotic species."

Eddie Stevens, one of the three-man monitoring team, from the Environment Agency said, "What we actually came across was something which we would not expect to find in our wildest dreams - we could hardly believe our eyes.”

"After completing 20 metres of the survey a large tail emerged from the undercut bank on the far side of the river. Our first thought was that a sea trout had become lodged in amongst the rocks and debris collected under the bank. But when it was removed from the river we were speechless to find it was a piranha."

Gearing up for Copenhagen

WWF’s Earth Hour today announced that the City of Copenhagen will play host to a single-city Earth Hour while it hosts the crucial international conference intended to produce a new deal to stabilise the earth’s climate.

The special Earth Hour, involving Copenhagen citizens turning out their lights for one hour at 7pm on 16 December 2009, will demonstrate the city’s support for world’s leaders reaching agreement on fair and effective ways to reduce the risks of catastrophic climate change

"Copenhagen will have a special role as host for the COP15. We'll gather the mayors from the world’s largest cities in December to put pressure on the state leaders to negotiate an agreement in Copenhagen. Also the city will host a series of exiting climate events to engage and involve the citizens of Copenhagen and the many guests in the city. Earth Hour Copenhagen, will be a great example of this,” said Lord Mayor of Copenhagen, Ritt Bjerregaard.

Earth Hour Copenhagen follows and builds on the overwhelming support for effective climate action demonstrated by hundreds of millions of people from 88 countries turning off lights for Earth Hour on 28 March earlier this year.

More than 4,000 cities and towns, including nine of the world’s 10 largest cities, participated in the event which saw the lights go out on many of the world’s great landmarks, including ancient wonders the Pyramids and the Parthenon and national icons such as the Sydney Harbour Bridge and Opera House, Table Mountain, Big Ben, the Empire State building and the Eiffel Tower.

Earth Hour 2009 also drew the support of leading world figures such as UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon and Archbishop Desmond Tutu, who called climate change “the greatest human-induced crisis facing the world today.”

WWF International Director General James Leape said that the citizens of Copenhagen will become ambassadors for the rest of the world in calling for action on climate change at the UN Summit.

“Schools, churches, businesses and individuals in just one city can make a powerful statement on behalf of their fellow citizens around the planet.

“With hundreds of millions of people participating, this year’s Earth Hour delivered an unequivocal global mandate calling for action at Copenhagen.

In addition to announcing Earth Hour Copenhagen, the Earth Hour campaign has also launched a world first social mapping platform aimed at further illustrating this global mandate.

The new ‘Show Your Vote’ platform asks people to show their Vote for Earth (over Global Warming) in the lead up to the UN Climate Summit.

'Show Your Vote’ enables supporters to show their Vote for Earth online by pinpointing their location on a Google Map. Users can also add photos, videos and links, which will be displayed in a pop-up when their map pin is clicked.

The platform is open source, free, available to everyone and can easily be added to any web page, with or without Earth Hour branding. It can be customised to suit the look and feel of the host website and can easily include a modified message.

Earth Hour Executive Director, Andy Ridley called on people, companies and community groups to use the platform to influence the outcome of the most important decision human society has ever faced.

“Show your Vote is a great example of using technology to allow ordinary citizens to make a difference.

“It helps give a voice to billions of people who would otherwise have no chance to let world leaders know they want action at Copenhagen.

“Join the hundred of millions of people who Voted Earth during Earth Hour by getting on the platform and showing your Vote for Earth,” said Mr Ridley.

Indian groups seek ecological fertilisation subsidy

Photo: Wikimedia CommonsA multi stakeholder gathering comprising of farmers, farmer union representatives, government officials, civil groups, agricultural scientists and women self help group members has demanded the Indian government to provide subsidy support for ecological/organic fertilisation to ensure food security.

They were speaking at a public hearing organised by Greenpeace India and Sustainable Organic Initiatives for Livelihoods (SOIL), in Chitradurga district in the south Indian state of Karntaka to gather grass root level responses to the fertiliser subsidy reforms proposed by Government of India.

Finance minister during his budget speech had expressed concern over the declining response of agricultural productivity to increased fertiliser usage in the country and proposed reforms in the fertiliser subsidy sector to solve the crisis.

The government is planning to adopt a nutrient-based direct subsidy regime instead of the current product pricing regime. However, this proposed reform is being criticised by various stakeholders because this shift cannot solve the crisis as the soils are degraded due to years of indiscriminate use of chemical fertilisers and a shift to ecological fertilisation is inevitable to ensure food security. Every year India government spends millions on chemical fertiliser subsidies. The budget allocation for 2009-10 for fertiliser subsidies is Rs 49,980 crores.

Dr Bharathesh Reddy, district president, Karnataka State Organic Farming Mission who inaugurated the Public hearing said, “Generally, organic farmers who contribute to food security of the country with minimum damage to the environment are kept out of the subsidy benefits. Karnataka state government has come up with a model to promote organic farming. It is the only state in the country which is providing subsidy for popularising organic farming. This model can be adopted by the central government and can be scaled up. ”

Dr Ganapathi, a soil scientist from organic farming research institute, Shimoga said, “Soil is the capital for the farmer and this needs to be protected and saved through encouraging eco-friendly agricultural practices. Over-dependence on chemical fertilisers should be avoided as it can jeopardise food security of the country.”

“The degraded soils can be rejuvenated only through ecological farming practices and addition of organic matter in the soil. Tax payers’ money should be invested in a meaningful way by providing support systems for ecological fertilisation, which is the only way to ensure soil health and food security”, said P Srinivas, secretary, SOIL.

Siddhaveerappa, a farmer from Chitradurga, said that “time has come to slowly phase out the subsidies for chemical fertilisers and bring in alternatives”.

Earlier, Greenpeace India launched a report, Subsidising Food crisis, which provides scientific evidences to prove that soils are degraded in intensive agricultural areas due to excessive use of chemicals, and even balanced application of chemical nutrients cannot sustain yield under the present circumstances.

The report also dismisses the myth that enough organic materials are not available to shift to ecological fertilisation and finds that amount of nitrogen that could be potentially recovered in organic residues available in the country is similar to the total amount of synthetic nitrogen applied to Indian soils every year, 14 Mt. This highlights the potential feasibility of a complete shift from synthetic to organic nitrogen fertilisation.

The people’s forum came up with a people’s charter listing all possible alternative eco-friendly fertilisation practices that can be supported through subsidy.

“We will be organising similar public hearings in different parts of the country. The ideas and suggestions generated would be compiled and presented to the central government. We sincerely hope that the government will give due recognition to the suggestions from the real stakeholders at the grass roots and adopt a policy that will restore soil health and ensure food security ”, said Gopikrishna SR, sustainable agriculture campaigner, Greenpeace India.

Rural poor in Nepal to face more hunger

Dig Tsho Glacier Lake in Solukhumbu – Dig Tsho Glacier Lake (4,365m) burst on August 4, 1985 spilling an estimated 200 to 350 million cubic feet of icy water with a flood wave 35 to 50 feet in height. It partially destroyed a hydro-power project, 14 bridges and various trails and patches of cultivated land roughly 55 miles below and likely to burst again if climate change glacial retreat continues. Photo: Paribesh Pradhan/ICIMOD NepalPoor crop yields, water shortages and more extreme temperatures are pushing rural villagers closer to the brink as climate change grips Nepal, according to a new report launched by the international aid agency Oxfam.

In the report, “Even the Himalayas Have Stopped Smiling: Climate Change, Poverty and Adaptation in Nepal”, farmers told Oxfam that changing weather patterns had dramatically affected crop production, leaving them unable to properly feed themselves and getting into debt. Oxfam called the situation “deeply worrying.”

“Communities told us crop production is roughly half that of previous years. Some said that while they used to grow enough food for three to six months of the year, last year many could only grow enough for one month’s consumption,” said Oxfam’s Nepal country director, Wayne Gum. ”Poor farmers rely on rainfall. They farm small areas of land which, at the best of times, can barely produce enough food for the family.”

Currently, more than 3.4 million people in Nepal are estimated to require food assistance, due to a combination of natural disasters, including last year’s winter drought - one of the worst in the country’s history. Higher food prices have also reduced people’s ability to purchase food. Although single drought events cannot be attributed to climate change, climate models predict less winter rain, indicating how the current situation could get worse.

Among recent changes in weather patterns in Nepal are an increase in temperature extremes, more intense rainfall and increased unpredictability in weather patterns, including drier winters and delays in the summer monsoons. The melting of the Himalayan glaciers will also be felt well beyond Nepal’s borders. Scientists warn that if the Himalayan glaciers disappear – with some predicting this could happen within 30 years – the impact would be felt by more than one billion people across Asia.

Some of the heaviest burdens have fallen on women who are on the frontline of climate change. They have to travel further distances to fetch water and take on the responsibility for feeding the family as men in many poor households migrate seasonally to seek work.

“The predicted impacts of climate change will heighten existing vulnerabilities, inequalities and exposure to hazards”, said the report.

“Poor and marginalised communities tend to be those most vulnerable to climate change and least able to cope with weather-related disasters because of lack of access to information and resources to reduce their risk.”

Nepal is one of the world’s poorest nations, with 31per cent of its 28 million population living below the poverty line. Most of Nepal’s poor live in rural areas that are most at risk to disasters such as floods and landslides.

Oxfam says more work needs to be done in Nepal by the government and international organisations to create greater awareness about climate change and its likely impacts, to prioritise and institutionalise actions at national level; and help communities to play a greater role themselves in initiatives to reduce their vulnerability.

Nepal is extremely vulnerable to climate change; yet has one of the lowest emissions in the world – just 0.025per cent of total global greenhouse gas emissions.

Oxfam is calling on the world’s richest countries, those most responsible for global emissions, to do more to help poor countries like Nepal better adapt and mitigate the effects of climate change when they meet to discuss a global climate treaty in Copenhagen in December – in 100 days from tomorrow.

100 days to go – countdown to a Copenhagen climate deal

Oxfam Global Ambassador and Hollywood actor Gael Garcia Bernal stars in a new on-line advertisement made by international agency Oxfam urging people to join the new “tck tck tck” climate change campaign. “There are only 100 days remaining for the world to agree on a deal to tackle the biggest threat facing humanity,” Bernal said. “Every one of us is now responsible to pressure our leaders to be bold and decisive.”

Bernal, who was born in Mexico and has starred in six Academy Award-nominated films including Babel and The Motorcycle Diaries, is working with Oxfam to highlight the impact of climate change on poor people.

“We can stop the worst scenarios of climate change but only if we each do our bit – and that includes taking political action. The time is ticking away,” he said.

Oxfam International Executive Director Jeremy Hobbs said, “We are delighted that Gael has lent himself to this role at such an important time. This advertisement aims to add to the growing pressure on politicians to do the right thing.


The Oxfam advertisement

“Oxfam believes that the world’s governments can strike a deal in 100 days – but the detail is all important and will spell the difference between success and failure. A deal must be ambitious enough to keep us below 2°C warming and it must put the interests of poor people at its very heart,” Hobbs said.

The 60-second advertisement, featuring Bernal and people from around the world mimicking the ticking hand of a clock, marks the 100-day milestone from the vital Copenhagen climate change talks. It will be offered free to on-line news and blog sites around the world.

The tck tck tck campaign is run by an alliance of many faith groups, trade unions, and non-governmental organisations including Oxfam.

Ban all energy wasting bulbs: WWF to EU

WWF welcomes the ban on inefficient incandescent light bulbs, coming into effect in the EU from 1 September, but it says that equally energy wasting light bulbs like standard halogens should also be removed from the market.

The phase-out ban voted by Member States in December 2008 will remove all conventional incandescent bulbs from the shelves by 2012 and save 15 million tons of CO2 annually by 2020, equivalent to the entire current electricity consumption of Romania per year.

“Getting rid of incandescents is a no-brainer, but halogens are nearly as wasteful: we need to see the EU push innovative solutions into the market.” says Mariangiola Fabbri, Senior Energy Policy Officer at WWF’s European Policy Office.

The traditional incandescent bulb is one of the least efficient ways of producing light, along with the standard halogen. It disperses 95per cent of the energy it uses. The alternatives to energy wasting bulbs are most efficient halogen bulbs, compact fluorescent lamps (CFLs) and LED (light emitting diodes) bulbs.

WWF together with other organisations has launched a web portal to inform consumers about the most energy-efficient appliances and lighting equipment across Europe.www.topten.info

“Consumers need to receive correct and simple information about the many alternatives already available in the market” says Fabbri “Simple information on packaging and recycling collection systems at points of sale are crucial to achieving real savings and changing consumers’ habits”.

Wonder drug from tick's saliva

A fully engorged female tick, species Amblyomma variegatum,from which Variegin was isolated Photo: CEHScientists from Centre for Ecology & Hydrology (CEH) are among those tapping into nature’s medicine to develop a new drug from tick saliva that controls blood flow and prevents clotting. Their discovery is now the subject of an international agreement between leading research organisations in the UK, Singapore, and Slovakia.

Dr Maria Kazimirova from the Slovak Academy of Sciences and Professor Patricia Nuttall’s team from the CEH, isolated a thrombin inhibitor (an anticoagulant, or anti-clotting agent) from the salivary glands of ticks, which they called Variegin.

They believe that the ticks secrete the anticoagulant to keep their host’s blood flowing while they feed.

Recognising the potential for this natural anti-clotting agent, the researchers teamed up with experts in snake venom peptides from the National University of Singapore.

In Singapore, Professor Manjunatha Kini and Dr Cho Yeow Koh used chemical methods to reproduce Variegin and make it more potent. They discovered that Variegin appears to be a new class of thrombin inhibitor, which may be more efficient and longer-lasting than the direct thrombin inhibitors currently on the market.

Professor Nuttall, Director of CEH, said, "By synthesising and modifying the anticoagulant our partners in Singapore were really able to understand how it works, and to improve its functions. As well as enabling blood to flow freely, we may now be able to stop the effect so that clotting is restored.

"This is an important breakthrough as it will potentially enable the development of new blood-controlling drugs with a much better performance level – and therefore fewer adverse side effects – than some of those currently available."
Professor Kini explained that during the course of evolution ticks had developed very potent and specific molecules that stop blood clotting and enable their blood-feeding lifestyle and survival.

He continued, "Although such natural compounds are close to perfection, sometimes there is still room for improvement. By understanding how Variegin works, we were able to reduce its size and at the same time improve its potency with suitable modifications."

The team now have molecules with different sizes, potency and mechanism and duration of action, providing a solid platform for further development of an anti-clotting agent. Dr Koh revealed, "One of them has 70 times more potency and long lasting anti-clotting effect than a drug that is currently available in the market."

The scientists have carried out initial tests on zebrafish to see if Variegin can prevent venous thrombosis. The tests are a model for preventing deep vein thrombosis in humans.

"The tests were a huge success and completely inhibited thrombus formation," said Professor Nuttall. "We need to do more studies like that to get Variegin into clinical trials."

This translational research could have potential applications for coronary diseases such as narrowed arteries and heart attacks, as well as deep-vein thrombosis and drug-induced blood clotting. It could be applied during major surgery to control bleeding. There is also evidence that, by controlling blood flow and clotting, the spread of some cancers could be diminished or prevented.

The international partners have filed patent applications to protect their development of this technology. They have also drawn up a commercialisation agreement through the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC), with a view to getting Variegin from the laboratory bench to the bedside. NERC's commercialisation and innovation team is now actively seeking commercial partners or licensing deals to take this forward.

Bill Barnett, business development manager, said, "This is a really exciting opportunity to take research that has potential health benefits and develop it to a stage where it will make a real difference to the man on the street."

Costs of adapting to climate change dearer

UN climate negotiations should aim for substantially more funding

Scientists led by a former co-chair of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change has warned that the UN negotiations aimed at tackling climate change are based on substantial underestimates of what it will cost to adapt to its impacts.

The real costs of adaptation are likely to be 2-3 times greater than estimates made by the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), say Professor Martin Parry and colleagues in a new report published by the International Institute for Environment and Development and the Grantham Institute for Climate Change at Imperial College London.

The report adds that costs will be even more when the full range of climate impacts on human activities is considered.

Parry and colleagues warn that this underestimate of the cost of adaptation threatens to weaken the outcome of UNFCCC negotiations, which are due to culminate in Copenhagen in December with a global deal aimed at tackling climate change.

“The amount of money on the table at Copenhagen is one of the key factors that will determine whether we achieve a climate change agreement,” says Professor Parry, visiting research fellow at the Grantham Institute for Climate Change at Imperial College London. “But previous estimates of adaptation costs have substantially misjudged the scale of funds needed.”

The UNFCCC has estimated annual global costs of adapting to climate change to be USD40-170 billion, or the cost of about three Olympic Games per year.

But the report’s authors warn that these estimates were produced too quickly and did not include key sectors such as energy, manufacturing, retailing, mining, tourism and ecosystems. Other sectors that the UNFCCC did include were only partially covered.

“Just looking in depth at the sectors the UNFCCC did study, we estimate adaptation costs to be 2-3 higher, and when you include the sectors the UNFCCC left out the true cost is probably much greater,” warns Parry, who co-chaired the IPCC working group on impacts, vulnerability and adaptation between 2002 and 2008.

The new report’s key findings include:

Water: The UNFCCC estimate of USD11 billion excluded costs of adapting to floods and assumes no costs for transferring water within nations from areas of surplus to areas of deficit. The underestimate could be substantial, according to the new report.

Health: The UNFCCC estimate of USD5 billion excluded developed nations, and assessed only malaria, diarrhoea and malnutrition. This could cover only 30-50% of the global total disease burden, according to the new report.

Infrastructure: The UNFCCC estimate of USD8-130 billion assumed that low levels of investment in infrastructure will continue to characterise development in Africa and other relatively poor parts of the world. But the new report points out that such investment must increase in order to reduce poverty and thus avoid continuing high levels of vulnerability to climate change. It says the costs of adapting this upgraded infrastructure to climate change could be eight times more costly than the higher estimates predicted by the UNFCCC.

Coastal zones: The UNFCCC estimate of USD11 billion excluded increased storm intensity and used low IPCC predictions of sea level rise. Considering research on sea level rise published since the 2007 IPCC report, and including storms, the new report suggests costs could be about three times greater than predicted.

Ecosystems: The UNFCCC excluded from its estimates the costs of protecting ecosystems and the services they can provide for human society. The new report concludes that that this is an important source of under-estimation, which could cost over USD350 billion, including both protected and non-protected areas.

The report calls for detailed case studies of what adaptation costs will be, and points out that the few that already exist suggest that costs will be considerable.
It adds that the UNFCCC estimates do not include the cost of bearing ‘residual damage’ that will arise from situations where adaptation is not technically feasible or simply too expensive.

“Finance is the key that will unlock the negotiations in Copenhagen but if governments are working with the wrong numbers, we could end up with a false deal that fails to cover the costs of adaptation to climate change,“ says Camilla Toulmin, director of the International Institute for Environment and Development, which co-published the report.

Atrazine linked to cancer, birth defects

New research on birth defects at extremely low concentrations and documentation of widespread ground- and drinking-water contamination has strengthened the case for banning the toxic compound atrazine, the most commonly used herbicide in the US.

Atrazine is a widely used weed killer that chemically castrates male frogs at extremely low concentrations and is linked to significant human and wildlife health concerns, including endocrine disruption, birth defects, fertility problems, and certain cancers.

“It’s time to ban atrazine to protect our drinking water and our most imperiled wildlife,” said Jeff Miller, a conservation advocate with the Center for Biological Diversity. “There is no reason to continue use of this poisonous contaminant given the building evidence of harm to humans and endangered species.”

Atrazine is a potent chemical that is the most common contaminant of ground-, surface, and drinking water across the US. Recent research published in peer-reviewed journals suggests that small amounts of atrazine in drinking water can be harmful at much lower concentrations than federal standards, and link the pesticide to birth defects, low birth weights, premature births, and menstrual problems. Previous research has provided evidence linking atrazine to prostate cancer and decreased sperm count in men, and higher risk of breast cancer in women.

Articles this week in the New York Times, Washington Post, and Huffington Post discuss how the Environmental Protection Agency is ignoring unsafe atrazine contamination levels in surface and drinking water in the Midwest and South. Agency documents show that numerous watersheds and drinking-water systems are contaminated with atrazine, which was banned by the European Union and in Switzerland, the home country of its parent company Syngenta, because of dangers to both people and wildlife.

Atrazine is linked to declines of endangered amphibians and fish in California such as the California red-legged frog, California tiger salamander, Delta smelt, coho and chinook salmon, and steelhead trout. Atrazine also harms many other endangered species throughout the country, including sea turtles in Chesapeake Bay, Barton Springs salamanders in Texas, endangered mussels in Alabama, shortnose sturgeon in Midwest waters, the Wyoming toad, and the Illinois cave amphipod.

Numerous studies have definitively linked pesticides and herbicides with significant developmental, neurological, and reproductive damage to amphibians. Pesticide contamination can cause deformities, abnormal immune system functions, diseases, injury, and death.

Studies by Dr. Tyrone Hayes at the University of California show that atrazine is an endocrine disruptor that interferes with reproduction and “assaults male sexual development.”

Dr. Hayes demonstrated that atrazine chemically castrates and feminizes male frogs at concentrations 30 times lower than levels allowed by the EPA. Although exposure levels as low as 0.1 parts per billion (ppb) result in frog hermaphrodites, the agency’s atrazine criterion for the “protection of aquatic life” is 12 ppb.

Conservationists sued the EPA in 2003 for failing to review the impacts of atrazine on several endangered species. The registration for atrazine was revised later that year, revealing the agency’s obeisance to the agrochemical industries it was intended to regulate. Despite numerous studies and overwhelming evidence linking atrazine to significant human and wildlife health concerns, the agency imposed no new restrictions on its use.

The Center for Biological Diversity has mounted a Pesticides Reduction Campaign to hold the EPA accountable for pesticides it registers for use and to cancel or restrict use of harmful pesticides within endangered species’ habitats.

The Center's 2004 report, Silent Spring Revisited: Pesticide Use and Endangered Species, details the decades-long failure of the agency to regulate pesticides harmful to endangered species. In 2006 the Center published Poisoning Our Imperiled Wildlife: San Francisco Bay Area Endangered Species at Risk from Pesticides, a report analysing the agency’s dismal record in protecting Bay Area endangered species and the agency’s ongoing refusal to reform pesticide registration and use in accordance with scientific findings.


Manchester-made pump will change lives in Africa

Dale Barnes in Sierra LeoneA young engineer at The University of Manchester has turned a few bits of pipe, metal and bolts into a water pumping system that has the potential to change the lives of entire villages in Sierra Leone.

But sadly, the simple but highly effective system, built by mechanical engineering graduate Dale Barnes, may never make it to Africa, due to lack of funding for the project.

Dale, who has just graduated with first class honours in Mechanical Engineering, wants to manufacture and install a water transport system for the rural village of Bunumbu in Sierra Leone.

He has been spending long hours over the summer building a working prototype system in the Hydro Laboratories at the University.

And now he’s proved the technology works, he’s appealing for businesses in Manchester and the Northwest to get behind the project by providing sponsorship.

The hydraulic ram pump system is a simple but highly effective mechanical device that allows water to be transported uphill from a river.

The design has been around hundreds of years and can essentially be made from sheets of scrap metal and some bolts, meaning that all the materials to make the pump can be sourced locally with relative ease.

It has only two moving parts and uses the force of the water to keep it pumping, meaning it is highly reliable, needs little maintenance and has a long life.

Providing a constant and reliable water supply to Bunumbu will improve sanitation and health in the village, positively changing the lives of hundreds of people. It will allow people to spend less time collecting water by hand, giving them more time to pursue education or earn a living, and also bring benefits for local agriculture.

Working with fellow engineering graduate Greg Quinn and Rainer Gonzalez Palau, a postgraduate student in the Institute for Development Policy and Management, Dale is ultimately aiming to start a business in the country that offers the local community fairly-paid jobs and training opportunities based around the manufacture and maintenance of the water pumping system.

But the bottom line is that he needs to raise 35,000 pound in sponsorship to build the first water transportation system and get the business up and running.

Dale said: “There are so many villages near to rivers in Sierra Leone that could benefit hugely from this technology.

“Once the first pump system is installed, we hope to start a business in the country to oversee the manufacture and implementation of this technology, where local workers will be paid a reasonable wage. Our aim is to bring something good to Sierra Leone, instead of taking all the good things out, which is what all the big companies operating there seem to be doing.

“We have put together a detailed project brief, cost analysis, technical overview and risk analysis and would love to talk to any companies which think they might be able to support us.”

The project came about after Dale did a three-month placement at a titanium oxide mine in Sierra Leone in 2008 under the International Association for the Exchange of Students for Technical Experience programme.

He had earlier worked on a project to build and test ram pumps, and quickly recognised the potential benefits the water system could offer rural communities in developing countries such as Sierra Leone.

The project is being backed financially by the School of Mechanical, Aerospace and Civil Engineering, with staff working in all parts of the University providing expertise and guidance.

Businesses interested in sponsoring the project should contact Dale on 07840 470444 or email daleb@live.com.




Gola forest to be made National Park: Sierra Leone

Photo: Guy Shorrock/RSPBSierra Leone has reiterated its intention to declare the Gola forest a National Park. Sierra Leone President Ernest Bai Koroma recently wrote to BirdLife International in this regard.

“I would like to re-assure you of my government’s commitment to implementing the Sierra Leone Biodiversity Action Programme in collaboration with your organisation, not only to mitigate the effects of global warming, but also to preserve our rich fauna and flora, and cultural heritage for generations to come”, wrote Ernest Bai Koroma. “I am hopeful that the Gola Forest National Park Bill will be introduced in Parliament in the coming weeks”.

The Gola Forest National Park will form part of a new Trans-boundary Peace Park announced jointly by the Presidents of Sierra Leone and Liberia in May this year. The Trans-boundary Peace Park will protect one of the largest remaining blocks of intact forest in the Upper Guinea Area of West Africa.

Gola Forest Reserve, the largest area of Upper Guinea rainforest in Sierra Leone, occupies the south-eastern edge of the country. The main river draining Gola North is the Mogbai, and its catchment spans the centre of the reserve. This river discharges into the Mano river, which runs along the border with the Republic of Liberia.

Out of the 250 species of birds in the region, more than 25 are threatened or restricted-range species. The 75,000 hectare park is also home to more than 50 mammal species, such as forest elephant, pygmy hippo, and 10 species of primates, including the threatened chimpanzee.

World on thin ice, say climate groups

An melting ice sculpture, symbolically calling all for action and placed by a coalition of climate groups on a map of the world. Photo: Ameen Ahmed/WWF-IndiaAn melting ice sculpture, symbolically calling all for action and placed by a coalition of climate groups on a map of the world, melted fast on the Delhi grass, warning that the world as we know , would be washed away if glaciers melt because of climate change.

The melting sculpture marked the start of the 100-day countdown to the United Nations Copenhagen Climate Summit, and the launch of the TckTckTck campaign, which is urging governments to agree a fair, binding and ambitious deal at the summit.

At the same time, ice sculptures of 100 children are being unveiled at the Temple of Earth in Beijing, symbolising the vanishing future of the more than a billion people in Asia who are threatened with water shortages by the changing climate.

The Delhi sculpture has been put up by the Climate Action Network South Asia (CANSA), a coalition of groups fighting climate change. Greenpeace China Climate Campaigner Li Yan, who was present at the CANSA press conference, urged India and China to work together on climate protection. Li urged that the two countries establish a truly low-carbon sustainable development model, and that the developed countries contribute to achieving this goal.

Sanjay Vashist of CANSA said: “The developed nations have committed up to 16 percent reduction in greenhouse gases by 2020 compared to the levels in 1990. This will not halt the rise in temperature above 4 degree Celsius, which will have serious consequences for the earth.” One such consequence is the rapid melting of glaciers which jeopardises the water supply for 1.3 billion Asians who live in the watershed of the seven great rivers that originate in the Himalayas.

People affected by the changing climate in different parts of India gave testimonies at the conference, under the aegis of the Gorakhpur Environmental Action Group, the Ekta Parishad, the Himalaya Pariyavaran Shiksha Sansthan, and Marag.

"The poor in developing countries suffer the most from climate change. Changing temperatures and erratic rainfall are already affecting agricultural yields. Women, who provide food, water and fuel for their families, are the hardest hit. If left unchallenged, future climate impact would threaten the survival of millions," said Aditi Kapoor, of Oxfam.

“The challenge today is far broader than just emission reductions, it a challenge of meeting development objectives within the constraints of climate change. We need strong action on climate change where everyone comes together as time is ticking away,” concluded Shirish Sinha of the WWF.

Irrigation revolution in Armenia

Photos: World BankThe Armenia Irrigation Rehabilitation Emergency Project (IREP) is helping people revive agriculture in the most remote parts of the country, such as the village of Aghavnadsor located in the mountainous region of Vayots Dsor.

Vahram Matevosyan, whose vineyards have enlarged over new lands irrigated by water in Aghavnadsor village, says: "The situation has improved drastically. I am establishing new vineyards with optimism, being sure that they will never wither."

Nature has endowed Vayots Dsor region of Armenia with severely dry and mountainous land. Yet, if irrigated, it delivers some of the best wine grapes in the country.

The village of Aghavnadsor spreads across a high-altitude valley at the foot of rocky mountains, insurmountable and non-arable at first glance. However, recently farming, the traditional occupation of the local people, has 'migrated' high into the mountains. This is the result of the newly-introduced irrigation system in the area. The construction of Vayots Dzor gravity pipeline, spanning nearly 70 kilometers, is far more efficient than the old system of pumps which took huge volumes of electricity consumption.

Through the World Bank-sponsored Irrigation Development Project (IDP), the basis for an effective and sustainable management of irrigation infrastructure has been created in Armenia, including conversion from pumping to gravity, and rehabilitation of some of the main irrigation structures and tertiary canals. As a result, irrigated land had increased by the end of 2008. Conversion from pumps with high electricity costs to gravity irrigation has resulted in saving around 51 million KWT electricity annually, amounting to a total of USD3.5 million.

Farmer Spartek HageyanMichael Grigoryan from Aghavnadsor turned to large-scale farming only two years ago, when the outcomes of the project reached the lands surrounding his village. He leased land on the hill above the village and started the mass planting of young vines.

"Irrigation had always been a major issue, for us, as well as for the neighboring communities, ever since the system collapsed in the early nineties. I became extremely enthusiastic, when I learnt two years ago that the lands above had become irrigable, so I started a new vineyard," says Michael. "I rejoice every time watering my young plants and watching them grow day by day. I am very optimistic that already next year I will reap a good harvest and enjoy the first portion of wine from my land."

Many farmers have switched from wheat to higher value crops. Artak Sargsyan, with his 17 hectares of land in Talvorik village of Armavir region, is one of them. "Irrigation used to be a huge constraint, and farmers were unable to bring in the crops they would have with better access to water," he says. "Not anymore. Now I am confident of what I am cultivating."

Armavir, the main canal that takes water from the Araks river, was one of the greatest achievements of the project. The reconstruction of the head gate redoubled the capacity of the intake, up to 53 square meters of water per second. The irrigation water supply in Armavir region has dramatically improved due to reconstruction of the head intake on the canal and to rehabilitation of the on-farm irrigation network. As a result, Artak is now planting new vineyards in the vicinity of where old ones used to be. Moreover, special software installed in the Water Users Associations allows him, as well as all water users, to follow how much water he has used and how much he has paid against it.

The establishment of Water Users Associations was a real revolution in the maintenance of the irrigation system in Armenia. Through this initiative 14 public agencies responsible for irrigation water delivery were replaced. There are 44 associations operating in the country currently, signing agreements with farmers, delivering water and maintaining the irrigation network.

The success of the Water Users Associations is tangible. "Whether through institutional reform, or development of infrastructure, we strive towards one goal: delivering more water to farmers, in time and in the quantity required by the farmer," says Adibek Ghazaryan, Director of the Water Sector Development and Institutional Improvements Project Implementation Unit. "Statistics, including that of decreased water loss and huge increase of payments collection, shows that we are achieving success."

Upon this success will be built a new World Bank-sponsored project, the Irrigation Rehabilitation Emergency Project (IREP). Resources will be channeled to the rehabilitation of almost 84 km of the main canals in Armavir and Talin that will reduce losses of up to 70 thousand cubic meters of water and could help to bring land back to irrigation.

The project will go one step further in the institutional reform process, by providing further support to the Water Users Associations, in particular through creation of Federations of Water User Associations. The new project also aims to create jobs on the ground, and thus alleviate the poverty of the local people.