Archive for October, 2010

World Bank working on ‘natural wealth’ as part of a countries financial accounts

India is wanting to become the first country in the world to commit to publishing a new set of accounts. These accounts will track the nation’s plants, animals, water and other “natural wealth” on top of the current financial measurements such as GDP, etc.

Work on how these will be measured will be coordinated by the World Bank. Next step will be agreement on these measures.

Lets send a positive message to the community at large to encourage our own countries to follow this important direction.

I think it’s a great initiative. What do you think?

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new 230,000 square miles sanctuary for whales and dolphins (via Eco Green Travel)

new 230,000 square miles sanctuary for whales and dolphins Dolphins, whales, and dugongs will be safe from hunting in the waters surrounding the Pacific nation of Palau. At the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) in Nagoya, Japan, Palau’s Minister of the Environment, Natural Resources and Tourism, Harry Fritz, announced the establishment of a marine mammal sanctuary covering over 230,000 square miles (60,000 square kilometers) of the nation’s waters, an area the size of Mongolia. (photo source- outd … Read More

via Eco Green Travel

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Brazil’s Amazon in dangerous drought

A severe drought has pushed river levels in Brazil’s Amazon region to record lows, scientists say, is an expected result of global warming, leaving isolated communities dependent on emergency aid and thousands of boats stranded on parched riverbeds.

The level of the dark Rio Negro, a tributary to the Amazonas river and itself the world’s largest black-water river, fell to 13.63 meters (45 feet) on Sunday, its lowest since records began in 1902, according to the Brazilian Geological Service.

“People are lacking food because fish are dying in the warm waters. Nearly all boats are grounded — only the smallest ones can navigate the waters,” said Rosival Dias, a coordinator with the Amazonas Sustainable Foundation environmental group who has visited affected areas.

“I’ve worked in the region about 30 years and never seen anything like the last few years. This has everything to do with climate change

.”

Amazonas state says the emergency has affected 62,000 people in 38 municipal areas, and that 600 tonnes of food aid has been distributed by plane and boat. The Brazilian government announced last week it was releasing 23 million reais ($13.5 million) in emergency aid.

Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE69P3NC20101026

Photo Source: www.oilcrisis.com/globalwarming/

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UN Deforestation takes center-stage

Delegates at the global U.N. meeting to preserve natural resources were trying to agree on ways to deploy about $4 billion in cash to help developing nations save tropical forests.

The talks are aimed at setting new 2020 targets to protect plant and animal species, a protocol to share genetic resources between countries and companies and more funding to protect nature, especially forests.

The U.N. Food and Agriculture Organisation estimates global deforestation fell from 16 million hectares (40 million acres) per year in the 1990s to 13 million hectares per year in the past decade, with the bulk of the losses in tropical countries.

About 12 percent of the world’s forests are designated primarily to conserve biological diversity, the FAO said in report earlier this month.

Forests soak up large amounts of carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas, and help curb the pace of climate change. They are also key water catchments, help clean the air and are home to countless species.

"Our forests need immediate action," said Brazil’s Environment Minister Izabella Teixeira told the meeting.

Ministers are focusing on a voluntary partnership covering nearly 70 nations aimed at boosting a U.N.-backed scheme that seeks to reward developing countries that preserve and restore forests.

Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE69P0L820101026

Photo: http://www.sciencemuseum.org.uk/antenna/carboncycle/images/deforestation.jpg

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new 230,000 square miles sanctuary for whales and dolphins

Dolphins, whales, and dugongs will be safe from hunting in the waters surrounding the Pacific nation of Palau. At the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) in Nagoya, Japan, Palau’s Minister of the Environment, Natural Resources and Tourism, Harry Fritz, announced the establishment of a marine mammal sanctuary covering over 230,000 square miles (60,000 square kilometers) of the nation’s waters, an area the size of Mongolia.

(photo source- outdoors.webshots.com)

"Palau’s dugongs are the most isolated and endangered population in the world. We also have at least 11 species of cetaceans in our waters, including a breeding population of Sperm Whales and possibly as many as 30 other species of whales and dolphins

that utilize our EEZ. This sanctuary will promote sustainable whale-watching tourism, already a growing multi-million dollar global industry, as an economic opportunity for the people of Palau," Fritz said in Nagoya.

Already, last year Palau declared its waters a sanctuary for sharks. Sharks have been decimated worldwide, with some species’ population plunging by 99 percent, due to by catch, overconsumption, and the shark-fin trade, whereby caught sharks’ fins are cut off and the animals

are thrown back into the water to die.

Although many populations of whales are rebounding after centuries of commercial whaling, some are still threatened by whaling by Iceland, Japan, and Norway

, as well as pollution. Dolphins are often killed as by catch and suffer from widespread marine pollution.

Source: http://news.mongabay.com/2010/1024-hance_mammal_sanctuary.html

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Obama Administration Denies Protection to Spotted Seals in Alaska

Responding to a petition by the Center for Biological Diversity, the Obama administration Thursday finalized Endangered Species Act protection for two small populations of spotted seals in China and Russia that are threatened by loss of sea ice but has denied protections for larger spotted seal populations suffering from sea-ice loss in Alaskan waters

Source: Center for Biological Diversity

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Tropics in decline – WWF 2010 Living Planet report

New analysis shows populations of tropical species are plummeting and humanity’s demands on natural resources are sky-rocketing to 50 per cent more than the earth can sustain, reveals the 2010 edition of WWF’s Living Planet Report — the leading survey of the planet’s health.

The biennial report, produced in collaboration with the Zoological Society of London and the Global Footprint Network, uses the global Living Planet Index as a measure of the health of almost 8,000 populations of more than 2,500 species. The global Index shows a decrease by 30 per cent since 1970, with the tropics hardest hit showing a 60 per cent decline in less than 40 years.

"There is an alarming rate of biodiversity loss in low-income, often tropical countries while the developed world is living in a false paradise, fuelled by excessive consumption and high carbon emissions," said Jim Leape, Director General of WWF International.

While the report shows some promising recovery by species’ populations in temperate areas, thanks in part to greater conservation efforts and improvements in pollution

and waste control, tracked populations of freshwater tropical species have fallen by nearly 70 per cent — greater than any species’ decline measured on land or in our oceans.

"Species are the foundation of ecosystems," said Jonathan Baillie, Conservation Programme Director with the Zoological Society of London. "Healthy ecosystems form the basis of all we have — lose them and we destroy our life support system."

The Ecological Footprint, one of the indicators used in the report, shows that our demand on natural resources has doubled since 1966 and we’re using the equivalent of 1.5 planets to support our activities. If we continue living beyond the Earth’s limits, by 2030 we’ll need the equivalent of two planets’ productive capacity to meet our annual demands.

"The report shows that continuing of the current consumption trends would lead us to the point of no return," added Leape. "4.5 Earths would be required to support a global population living like an average resident of the of the US."

For more information: http://wwf.panda.org/?uNewsID=195695

Source: http://www.enn.com/top_stories/article/41880

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