Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

338 - Earth's Tree News

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

Today for you 37 new articles about earth's trees! (338th edition)

Subscribe / send blank email to:

earthtreenews-

Weblog: http://olyecology.livejournal.com

 

--British Columbia: 1) Coleman Blunders ahead, 2) Creditors dance on

ruins of always unsustainable industry, 3) Gov's lack of oversight

makes beetle problem worse, 4) Klinaklini River, 5) Caribou extinction

proceedings, 6) Hupacasath Nation says crown is an actor in bad faith,

7) Murrelet surveys never acted on, 8) Industry-wide shutdown,

--Canada: 9) Big trouble caused by overharvesting, 10) Save the Oak

Ridges Moraine, 11) 19th century clear cutting practices still 94% of

all logging, 12) Save the Warblers,

--UK: 13) 40,000 street trees lost in 5 years, 14) Last of Lee Hill

Oaks cut for bridge, 15) Memorial trees to be dug up by developers,

--Finland: 16) Palm oil fuel protested by Greenpeace Orangutans

--Turkey: 17) Paper industry wants gov to give them their forests…

--Estonia: 18) 50,000 volunteers pick up garbage in forests

--Azerbaijan: 19) Thousand of oaks cut down and exported in occupied territories

--Africa: 20) Solve poverty by addressing droughts and deforestation

--Western Mali: 21) This is the land of the sacred tree, Chinese say otherwise

--Kenya: 22) Enviro minister decries forest destruction in Mau

--Puerto Rico: 23) Decline in rainfall correlates to deforestation

--Dominican Republic: 24) Ecologist warn of need to protect forests

--Guyana: 25) Save a little rainforest and give most of what remains to S & S

--Costa Rica: 26) Local seed gathering turns barren land into diverse ecosystem

--Brazil: 27) Yet another sustainable development plan for the Amazon,

28) Trees in amazon grow slower than previously thought, 29) Lack of

sulfur dioxide emissions is drying rainforest, 30) New Gov claim that

Amazon destruction has slowed,

--Ecuador: 31) Illegal logger speared to death & 15 indigenous beheaded

--Colombia: 32) Still no leadership for forest protection surveys

--Chile: 33) Canada's largest retirement plan invests in destruction

of " eco-gem "

--Latin America: 34) Carbon Market development

--India: 35) Rally to save old Banyan tree, 36) 35,000 trees cut down

for hydro in Kullu,

--Pakistan: 37) New projects needed to develop forest: Parks and Zoos

 

British Columbia:

 

1) " Traditionally the AAC [annual allowable cut] has been based on saw

logs. In reality, the AAC could be sustained at a higher level than it

is now with a parallel industry to use some of the timber. " This

roundtable is to get people thinking about the future. " Coleman said

there are some aspects of the problems facing the forest industry

which neither the roundtable or the whole B.C. forest industry could

fix on their own. " The whole country, for instance, has to change its

attitude to solid waste in all forms, not just wood waste. " He said

the market system in place would insure that if people came up with

uses for the beetle-kill wood, it would be harvested. " The way they'll

get the wood out faster is if someone is willing to pay for it. "

Coleman also made it very clear the government was not using the

roundtable as a way to find alternatives to the forest industry.

http://www.bclocalnews.com/bc_north/ominecaexpress/news/18673024.html

 

2) " This is very disappointing but not unexpected, " said Bob Smiley,

of the Pulp Paper and Woodworkers of Canada, who watched Wednesday

while lawyers representing creditors Ableco Finance and Wells Fargo

argued over who would advance the money to complete the shutdown of

the mills. Smiley, who represents the Harmac employees, said workers

were taking the shutdown hard. " Some are leaving town; some are in

shock, " he said. Pope & Talbot is headquartered in Portland, Oregon,

but most of its assets are in B.C. It has already sold most of its

sawmills to Vancouver forest company Interfor but was unable to close

a deal to sell its pulp mills, two in B.C. and one at Halsey, Oregon,

to Asia Pulp & Paper. The Halsey mill already has a bidder but the

B.C. mills pose more of a problem. With so few sawmills operating,

fibre supplies are tight and both mills have resorted to chipping more

costly whole logs. The resource town of Mackenzie has been hit hardest

by the collapse of Pope & Talbot. The town of 4,000 is still reeling

from the closure Jan. 31 of two sawmills and a paper mill run by

AbitibiBowater. " This is a crisis but most people are still in shock.

What are we going to do? " said Berry. " This is people's lives. This is

probably the worst day you are going to see for most people here. If

this happened in Vancouver where you lost 300 jobs, it's not a big

deal. But this is a whole community. It's gone. "

http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/story.html?id=e2fcac87-2004-446d-8f14-1a\

b6790584ef

 

3) Instead of cutting down the infected forests whole-scale, the B.C.

government must ensure that the response to the crisis doesn't make a

bad problem worse. Non-pine species shouldn't be killed, and large

areas need to be set aside to protect the habitat of species that are

vulnerable to logging, and to preserve sensitive sites such as

wetlands, lakes, and rivers. We should also learn everything we can

from this epidemic, as it likely won't be the last. Other insects,

such as the spruce budworm, are threatening forests in Eastern Canada,

and the pine beetle itself has already leapt over the barrier of the

Rocky Mountains to threaten the boreal forest that covers most of

Northern Canada. The mountain pine beetle outbreak is a clear example

of how our actions can create ripple effects throughout the

environment. Let's hope that by the time the pine beetle runs out of

trees to attack in B.C., we will have learned enough to prevent even

greater bug-related disasters. We must also see this as a wake-up call

about the dangers of climate change and the need for industry,

citizens, and governments at all levels to do everything possible to

address the problem. Just because the beetles are small doesn't mean

they are insignificant; it's not a matter of size.

http://www.straight.com/article-144643/david-suzuki-little-bug-big-problem

 

4) The Klinaklini River flows through ranchlands and scenic mountains

near Kleena Kleene in the Chilcotin, on its way to the ocean. The

Klinaklini River, approximately 200 Km long, passes between some of

the tallest and most remote peaks in the Coastal Mountain Range. With

a mean annual discharge of close to 200 cubic meters per second (cms)

and peak flows reaching as high as 18,000 cms the Klinaklini River is

one of the largest rivers in the province. Home to large populations

of threatened Grizzly Bear and Marbled Murrelet, this drainage

currently encompasses some of least fragmented habitat on the Canadian

West Coast. With recorded Salmon, Steelhead and Eulachon runs in the

lower river found to be some of the largest in the Georgia Basin.

Kleana Power Corp, a junior energy corporation without any currently

successful projects, has recently proposed to develop the largest

private Run-of-River generating facility in BC’s history with an

average generating capacity of 280 MW and a peak capacity of 700 MW.

Pristine Power Inc. quotes annual generated power to be 2400 GWh. This

equals approximately to 50% of the power expected from Site C. In

order to create a generating capacity this large, generating and

transmission infrastructure of large proportion will be necessary.

http://www.klinaklini.info

 

 

5) MoE has finally been allowed to contribute to the Mtn.Caribou

Recovery Plan options under consideration for the Central Selkirks

Herd, and even working within the localized 1% political cap on

slow-downs to the cut which is all that government and industry are

willing to allow for caribou recovery, the 11th hour MoE option

released on Friday appears to offer a much greater advantage to

caribou than previous proposals from SARCO's special team. The big

important question is what would the local MoE recovery option look

like if it was allowed to reflect the honest best case scenario left

for caribou, and not required to conform to government's promise of

" no net loss to the timber industry " .Then we could overlay the

options, and see what is being lost. Here's what would be most helpful

--- challenge government to allow MoE to present the science based

truth rather than the twisted reductive socio-economic deceit that

SARCO seems forced to turn out. And then, if government's appointed

enviros would just stop shooting themselves in the foot by declaring

each successively worse caribou plan the best thing since mom and

apple pie (this has been going on since the first Higher Level Plan

some 15 years ago), the caribou might have half a chance. Glada

McIntyre, Executive Director, Applied Ecological Stewardship Council

of B.C. glada888

 

6) The Hupacasath First Nation today presented evidence that the Crown

has acted in bad faith during two years of court ordered negotiations

over the management of forest lands on Hupacasath traditional

territory. The allegations arise out of the discovery that BC

Investment Management Corp, an agent of the BC government, owns an

estimated 25% share in Island Timberlands, the company harvesting

timber and developing real estate on the contested lands. " It is a

clear conflict of interest, " states Will Horter, Lawyer and Executive of Dogwood Initiative. " The BC government can't carry out

negotiations in good faith when it has a commercial interest in

stymieing the process. " During the two years of negotiations the

Hupacasath and BC Government were unable to reach any accommodation.

In 2005 the BC Supreme Court found that the Crown had failed in it's

duty to consult the Hupacasath regarding the privatization of land

from tree farm licenses on First Nation territory. As a remedy the

court ordered a two year consultation period during which the

Hupacasath and BC Government were to negotiate and reach reasonable

accommodation. This is the latest in a series of controversies over

TFL deletions on Vancouver Island . The January 2007 decision by

Forest Minister Rich Coleman to allow Western Forest Products to

remove 28,000 hectares from its TFLs on Vancouver Island has met with

broad public opposition. First Nations affected by this decision are

also considering suing the BC government for lack of consultation.

Brookfield Asset Management owns 70% of Western Forest Products and

50% of Island Timberlands. The Brookfield group of companies have

donated $232,315 to the BC Liberal Party between 2004 and 2007.

http://www.dogwoodinitiative.org

 

7) Through helicopter surveys conducted between 2005 and 2007,

Interfor identified 35,000 hectares of marbled murrelet habitat within

the Sunshine Coast Forest District, most of it located within old

growth areas. In 2004, Interfor submitted their forest stewardship

plan pursuant to the Ministry of Environment's " section 7 notice " — a

mechanism that requires forest licensees to set legal targets for

amount and distribution of conservation habitat. The mechanism is

essentially the province's response, under the Forest and Range

Practices Act (FRPA), to the 2003 federal Species at Risk Act (SARA),

said Blatler. Interfor's plan outlined 23,000 hectares to be protected

for the marbled murrelet within what's called their non-contributing

land base (NCLB) — usually steeper slopes that don't often provide the

best habitat for the marbled murrelet. This is the problem with the

province's approach, says the Forest Practices Board — it's

encouraging licensees to create conservation areas largely outside

their timber harvesting land base (THLB), beyond where the best

habitat is found. Within the THLB, the province has set a cap of just

one per cent to be set aside for species at risk, notes Sunshine Coast

Conservation Association executive director Dan Bouman. " If federal

guidelines were applied, we'd have a much larger impact to the

harvestable land base, " he said. The report echoes his sentiment and

berates the province for failing to respond to the draft plan now

being pitched by the federal marbled murrelet recovery team — a plan

that would see 29,750 hectares, or 85 per cent, of the seabird's

habitat protected on the Sunshine Coast. It's up to the provincial

integrated land management bureau (ILMB) to make final conservation

decisions for the province to carry out, and so far they haven't. To

force the province to comply, the federal government would have to

" invoke extraordinary powers " under the SARA, says the report.

Ultimately, the ILMB is overseen by Minister of Agriculture and Lands

Pat Bell, who said the marbled murrelet's recovery is going so well it

could be removed from B.C.'s " red list " of species qualifying for

special protection. A report by B.C.'s independent forestry watchdog

is levelling criticism at the Ministry of Forests for failing to

develop an adequate strategy to conserve habitat for a threatened

seabird.

http://www.coastreporter.net/madison/WQuestion.nsf/ff1265d9ca9a674688256bb900543\

458/84d40b138

5d7ca6088257436001cc8c9?OpenDocument

 

8) WFP, the West Coast's largest forest company, announced on Tuesday,

April 29 that it was shutting down most of its logging operations and

laying off more than 800 loggers and contractors so it can bring its

log inventories in line with its lumber orders. " What this is all

about is matching production to market demand and operations, " said

Ley. " The expectation certainly is that the operation and others will

be back up, as identified right now. " Most of the layoffs impact

operations on the Sunshine Coast and Vancouver Island. Log harvesting

curtailments range between one and six weeks. In a notice to employees

and contractors, Trevor Boniface, vice president, Timberlands, stated

the company is curtailing operations in those areas which are heavily

weighted to providing logs for its commodity grade lumber program, or

are still being operationally hampered with snow pack levels. " While

we knew 2008 was going to be one of the most difficult years in recent

history for the forest industry, the continued reduction in United

States housing starts due to the subprime mortgage fiasco, extremely

depressed commodity lumber prices, continued strong Canadian dollar,

lumber border tax to the United States, challenging Japanese market

and the high cost of harvesting on the coast are all contributing to a

profoundly negative impact on our business, " Boniface stated. " We must

continue to adjust Timberlands log production to align with products

we can manufacture and sell. " According to another company statement,

the reduction in logging represents about one third of normal

harvesting undertaken during this period. " These curtailments are

intended to align log harvesting with Western's reduced sawmill

requirements, including the impact of an indefinite shutdown of the

sawmill located at Ladysmith on Vancouver Island, " the release stated.

http://www.zwire.com/site/news.cfm?newsid=19670877 & BRD=1998 & PAG=461 & dept_id=4995\

99 & rfi=6

 

Canada:

 

9) HALIFAX — Nova Scotia's forests are in big trouble and

clearcutting, overharvesting and bad management practices have cut

into their ability to help preserve the environment, GPIAtlantic said

in a report. " If we allow the status quo, if we allow the forest to

continue to degrade, we will see more flooding, our forests' ability

to store carbon will be lessened, there will be more soil erosion and

the plants and animals who rely on the forests will suffer, " said

Linda Pannozzo, who co-authored the report. A new report says measures

intended to save the severely degraded forests in Nova Scotia are too

little, too late. The Halifax-based research group GPI Atlantic says

much more needs to be done to counteract decades of over-harvesting,

clear cutting and other bad practices. GPI says there has been some

progress in forestry practices, but it's a " far cry " from what's

needed to deal with a massive increase in logging and clear cutting

over the last 25 years. The report says there has been a marginal

increase in selection harvesting and a small drop in clear cutting,

along with more land being placed under protection. But the group

makes eight main recommendations it says are necessary to begin to

restore and protect the value of Nova Scotia's forest wealth. They

include more incentives to woodlot owners to improve forest

management, a sharp reduction in clear cutting, and development of a

value-added forest strategy.

http://www.thechronicleherald.ca/Front/1054446.html

http://canadianpress.google.com/article/ALeqM5iiSI7K1r2Wq-2sVjC1RGziS3z4Jw

 

 

10) " Extensive stands of hard and softwood trees cover many hectares

of land on the sandy Oak Ridges Moraine in northern

Whitchurch-Stouffville. The forest is operated by the Region of York

and encompasses over 5000 acres on 18 tracts within the boundaries of

Georgina, Whitchurch-Stouffville and East Gwillimbury. With 2000 acres

of trails it is the perfect year-round destination for hiking,

cycling, horseback riding, cross country skiing, snowmobiling and

other recreational activities. " (Reference: http://www.yorkregion.com

) In the past five years, this area been subject to constant

clearcutting. Our government has seen fit to outsource logging, and

has brought in a team of people to 'tree farm'. In reality, the forest

is being clear cut, with timber being hauled away and sold, with

remaining branches stewn in the forest. Although No Smoking' signs are

posted at the entrance to the forest, we've come across numerous

groups of people smoking, and in remote riding areas, have seen

remains of campfires. Unlike natural reforestation these trees do not

decompose, but dry out, and in our hot July temperatures (90 -105

degrees) - this is a forest fire just waiting to happen. Complaining

to local officials seems to get absolutely no response - York Region

maintains they are merely " farming the forest, not clearcutting " Not

sure if they've actually had a look at the forest in the past five

years. Do you have any suggestions on what we can do here? Thank you

Jane Blake -- Jane.Blake

 

 

11) The " good " news: selection harvesting, which removes trees

selectively to maintain the integrity, age and species diversity,

health, and value of the forest as a whole, grew marginally from 0.9%

of logging in 2000 to 1.5% in 2005-06, while clearcutting declined

from 97% to 94% in the same period. But... All that is good, says GPI

report author, Linda Pannozzo, but it's a far cry from what's needed

to repair the huge damage caused by the massive increase in logging

and clearcutting in the last 25 years. Since the early 1980s, timber

harvest volumes have increased by nearly 60%—from 3.3 million cubic

metres annually to 5.2 million in 2006, after peaking at nearly 7

million cubic metres in 2004. As a result, the average age of Nova

Scotia's forests has never been younger. In the 1970s only 4% of the

province's forests were under 20 years of age, compared to 16% in the

1990s and 24% today. While the percentage of forests over 80 years old

has declined by 94% in the last half century, the proportion of very

young forests up to age 20 increased by a remarkable 327%. Older

forests (aged more than 80 years) declined from 25% of forests 50

years ago to just 1.5% in the latest forest inventory. True old-growth

forest, which dominated the province's forests prior to European

colonization, has virtually disappeared from Nova Scotia. Only 0.3% of

the province's forests are now more than 100 years old, down from 9%

fifty years ago. Not surprisingly, there has also been a marked

decline in forest-dependent species of flora and fauna.

http://thecoast.ca/Blog-3828.113118-3850.113118_Nova%20Scotia's%20forests.html

 

12) Sault Ste. Marie is home to one of the largest concentrations of

Canada Warblers. That's a wonderful feather in our cap, but one we

shouldn't take lightly. In April, the Canada warbler was listed as a

threatened species. " It's declined by 46 per cent between 1966 and

2005, " said Jennifer Baker, with Ontario Nature, the federation of

Ontario naturalists. That's a shocking decline. If those numbers

reflected the stock market, we'd be long past the panic stage. If they

reflected high-school drop-out rates we'd call a public inquiry. When

it comes to endangered species we often don't notice until its too

late. Perhaps one reason we don't notice the decline is that the

threat to song birds doesn't come from a dramatic source like

overhunting or some instant calamity. The decline is caused by the

gradual destruction of habitat here and in their winter homes. From

forestry to mining to construction we are altering the landscape.

Nearly one in every three birds on the continent was born in the

boreal forest. It's therefore critical that we manage the forest

responsibly. With this in mind, Baker visited Sault Ste. Marie to

raise awareness about more than 200 species of songbirds that migrate

to Northern Ontario. David Euler, Sault Naturalist club president,

said birds form an integral part of those ecosystems, and losing even

one species, such as the Canada Warbler, would hurt the whole chain.

http://www.saultstar.com/ArticleDisplay.aspx?e=1020809

 

UK:

 

13) As Judge Simon Brown pointed out (Letters, May 3), the felling of

40,000 of London's street trees in the past five years is tragic.

Intimidation of tree owners by the bully-boy tactics of insurers and

loss-adjusters causes many trees to be taken down unnecessarily. Like

many tree surgeons, I am appalled by the pressure put on tree owners

to remove trees when such drastic action is not backed by sound

evidence. The threat of punitive costs and legal action panics the

average person into compliance. Buildings on London clay will move

seasonally, as the water table fluctuates. In dry periods (such as

autumn 2004 to autumn 2006) the clay will shrink considerably and many

buildings will have cracks opening, but these usually close again upon

the onset of wet weather. If a tree has the misfortune to be in the

vicinity of such house movement it will carry the blame, a convenient

scapegoat for the insurance industry. A more robust defence of trees

must be mounted by those, like local authorities, who have the muscle

to take on insurers.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/opinion/main.jhtml?xml=/opinion/2008/05/07/nosplit/dt\

0701.xml

 

14) When the beacons were lit to signal the arrival of the Spanish

Armada, some of the Lees Hall oaks were already hundreds of years old.

And one, the oldest dated tree in the city, says William, was recently

cut down so the access bridge to the new school at Newfield could be

dual rather than single carriageway. " We weren't very happy, " he says.

" We tried all sorts, but they said they couldn't cope with a single

span. We were sad to see it go. " The loss of the 700-year-old tree was

'offset' with a compensation grant of 10,000 pounds, which is now

being used for conservation work elsewhere in the valley, he adds.

Experts from Sheffield Hallam University came up with the 700 plus age

of the departed tree by studying its remains after it was felled, and

together with the recent 'Heritage Tree Project' carried out in the

valley by landscape archeologist Dr Paul Ardron, a fuller picture is

now emerging, says William Fairhead, of " the ancient landscape around

a modern housing estate. " " It's a unique situation, with an area of

social deprivation with a very rich environment around it. I'd go so

far as to say that the Gleadless Valley is a richer environment and

has more interest than the average bit of Derbyshire countryside. " Dr

Ardron's Heritage Lottery Funded surveys found a wide range of

interesting old trees in the valley, including 16 'veterans' of 3-400

years old and 15 others likely to have been acorns before the 16th

century. Another group of coppiced oaks is even more ancient, possibly

more than 1000 years old.

http://www.sheffieldtelegraph.co.uk/features/Treasures-of-the-Valley.4067078.jp

 

15) Scores of trees planted in Enham Alamein to commemorate the lives

of people who have lived in the village over the years are to be moved

- to the anguish of some residents. The trees, mostly native deciduous

specimens, have been planted over many decades at the northern edge of

the community and each is marked with the name of the person

commemorated. But notices have appeared on the trees saying that there

are plans to move them to make way for unspecified developments that

will benefit the disabled. The land in question belongs to the trust

that runs the village, known simply as Enham. Parish councillor David

Hayward, lives near the area earmarked for change. " I have been told

that a lot of these trees won't survive being moved and I have already

heard from people who are not very happy about the whole thing, " he

said. " They haven't submitted a planning application for the area but

by putting up these notices it looks like a foregone conclusion. " I

would like the area to be left as park land and known as North Park as

it makes a nice entrance to the village. "

http://www.basingstokegazette.co.uk/news/aroundhampshire/andover/display.var.225\

4149.0.memorial

_trees_get_in_the_way_of_development.php

 

Finland:

 

17) Greenpeace demonstrators dressed as orangutans converged on the

Neste Oil filling station in the Eläintarha district of Helsinki on

Wednesday morning, protesting the use of tropical palm oil in Neste's

new diesel fuel. At about ten in the morning, the simian-clad

protesters placed locks on the nozzles of the fuel pumps at the Neste

station dispensing the new Green-diesel fuel, putting them temporarily

out of service. They also distributed leaflets to customers arriving

at the station. Greenpeace claims that the biofuel is not as green an

option as it is claimed to be, as its widespread use encourages the

clearing of rain forests in Indonesia and Malaysia. " We launched the

protest because Neste has not given up on the use of palm oil in the

production of its Green-diesel, in spite of demands " , said Greenpeace

representative Sini Saarela. The protest lasted about an hour. The

police first cordoned off the area, broke the locks that had been

placed on the fuel nozzles, and detained 11 demonstrators. Four people

were still detained at 6:00 PM. Police say that there was no intention

of placing anyone under arrest. Neste Oil says that it will issue a

criminal complaint and demand compensation for lost sales revenues

over the protest.

http://www.hs.fi/english/article/Neste+filling+station+closed+by+anti-palm+oil+d\

emonstration/1

135236177302

 

Turkey:

 

18) Turkey's paper sector representatives, who used effective lobbying

to benefit from the incentive law , are working hard to open forests

to the private sector following rapid increases in imports last year.

Paper sector representatives came together at the end of 2007 and

submitted a report to Prime Minister Recep Tayyip ErdoÄŸan, Forestry

Minister Veysel EroÄŸlu and Forestry General Directorate. Paper

producers ask in their report for an alteration of the existing forest

law and adoption of Finland model, the world leader in the forestry

sector. Home to the same amount of forests as Turkey, Finland has 50

times higher value-added income in forestry when compared to Turkey.

Finland is the world leader in paper products. The Finnish state is

permitted to rent lands available for agroforestry to forest villagers

and industrial enterprises. For each tree that is cut down, two

saplings are planted. Therefore, forest products are put to maximum

use and forest growth is assured.

 

Estonia:

 

18) Estonia's inhabitants have taken to the forests as part of a major

clean-up operation. A national effort to clean up the country came

about after an internet campaign, with more than 50,000 volunteers

taking part. Entitled Let's Do It! 2008, the event was the brainchild

of Skype founder and Estonian, Ahti Heinla and founder of Microlink,

Rainer Nolvak. An estimated three per cent of the population were sent

to clean the forest, roadside and other public areas, with dozens of

waste management companies supporting the initiative. The organisers

said up to 80 per cent of the collected waste is being recycled, with

the clean-up purporting to be the biggest civic event since the

singing revolution ushered in independence to the country almost 20

years ago. Forests cover over 2.3 million acres in Estonia. This news

item is brought to you by KMS Baltics in conjunction with Fest-Forest

and EST KINNISVARA. Baltic forestry and property specialists.

http://www.kms.ee/index.php?Estonians_clean_up_the_forests & page=12 & article_id=18\

585779 & action

=article

 

Azerbaijan:

 

19) Around 1,500-2,000 permanent oak trees were cut down and exported

from the occupied territories in the Khacha yal zone of Shusha region

of Azerbaijan by Armenians, Irada Ibrahimova, Head of the the Ministry

news-service, stated to TrendNews on 8 May. On 8 May, it is the 16th

anniversary of the occupation of Shusha by the Armenians. The city is

29,356 hectares and about 20% of the territory is a woodland area.

There are medicinal mineral water sources like Turshsu and Shirlan in

the city, which can be compared with the well-known water sources of

Yessentuki, with daily debit 70,000 and 342,000 cu m. Medicinal herbs

are widely grown in the region. There are facing stone fields with

reserves 1,143 cu m, as well as Kechaldag clay fields with 397,000 cu

m reserves suitable for use as construction materials. In 1988, the

State natural reserve Dashalti was set up in Shusha and Askaran

regions with an area of 450 hectares. Since 1992, the territory has

been under occupation and the reserve was completely destroyed.

Ibrahimova stated that the Operative Centre at the Ecology Ministry,

which investigates the influence of destruction to the environment and

natural resources in the occupied territories, disclosed a mass

destruction of natural resources in the Azerbaijani occupied

territories. Many permanent trees were cut and used as fuel from

Shusha, as well as about 200 trees being cut on the Lachin road near

Dordyol, Zarasli village being completely destroyed, two local schools

were pulled down, many trees were also cut down near the Agziyasti

cave and different buildings erected in its place.

http://news.trend.az/index.shtml?show=news & newsid=1194754〈=EN

 

Africa:

 

20) Drought and deforestation are the greatest environmental

challenges which pose a threat to poverty alleviation efforts in

Africa and the rest of the developing world. Yet, they are neglected

by many governments. This came out of a United Nations commission on

sustainable development currently underway at the world body's

headquarters in New York. Representatives of governments, business and

civil society are gathered to examine strategies to mitigate the

impact of drought, deforestation and climate change. Agriculture is

the main source of livelihood for most poor rural people. It is said

that deforestation will affect them significantly because it causes

land degradation and drought. This increases poverty and hunger which

then forces poor people to migrate or starve. These challenges also

pose threats to global security as people fight over scarce resources.

The UN conference seeks to persuade governments to adopt pro-active

measures to avoid deforestation. Echo-Agriculture's Sara Scherr

encourages Governments to work together to develop better land

management systems, to control overgrazing and to predict the impact

of rising temperatures. Programmes to restore the fertility of the

land have also been suggested. Bakary Kante of the Environmental Law

Conventions, fears that climate change will make it more difficult for

many developing countries to achieve the millennium development goals.

 

Western Mali:

 

21) In the heart of the Mandinka territory in western Mali, the

Mandinka believe that cutting down a tree is a sacrilege. This is the

land of the sacred tree, the tree of life, the tree of words, the one

that protects from evil spirits. So what has been going on here these

past few weeks has left people with a bitter taste and belief that the

land of their ancestors is being desecrated. In two months a Chinese

company lumbered 243 tonnes of wood, in what is one of the country's

last forest natural reserves. And it's not just any wood but Vene

Wood, a precious wood which resembles teak and whose leaves are used

to feed livestock. Mandinka hunters are firing guns into the air to

show their anger. The Minister of Environment had visited the region

earlier that day to try to calm things down. Around the negotiation

table are angry residents and two very ill-at-ease Chinese

representatives of the logging company. People want to know more about

this contract. The debate is fueled by a rumour: Chinese authorities

may have promised they would build a modern hospital in the capital

city of Bamako in exchange for a five-year logging contract. The

Malian government have temporarily suspended the logging contract due

to the anger of the locals. But suspended doesn't mean terminated. The

Mandinka people remain determined to save their sacred forest.

http://www.france24.com/en/20080509-report-mali-mandinka-forest-tree-environment\

-vene-wood-c

hina-chinese

 

Kenya:

 

22) Environment minister John Michuki has decried the wanton

destruction of forests at the Mau complex as a result of illegal

logging and human encroachment. Michuki said the extent of destruction

through depletion of forests was a clear manifestation that Kenyans

were not bothered with environmental conservation and its importance.

Addressing the press at Naishi airstrip in Lake Nakuru National Park

after making an extensive aerial tour of the May Water Tower, one of

the countries five water pillars, Michuki said Kenyans value for the

environment was limited to precious stones. " Since I took over as the

minister for environment, I found out with sadness that issues

concerning the environment were those dealing with precious stones but

those concerning conservation of forests, alerts on rivers drying up,

looming drought and others were largely ignored " , he said. " The

destruction of Mau complex has even attracted international concern, "

he noted. The minister was accompanied by the Environment ministry PS

Prof Jacob Ole Kiyiapi, NEMA Director General Muasya Mwinzi and KWS

director Julius Kipng'etich. Michuki said following his fact finding

mission, he was now in agreement with his cabinet colleague William

Ole Ntimama that those encroaching on forests should be evicted.

" Those who have invaded the forest for timber and farming are like

people who have lost hope for their country and want to grab anything

at their disposal, " he said. He said Njoro river whose source is the

Mau and empties its water into the world famous Lake Nakuru, home to

millions of lesser and greater flamingoes and other bird species was

now a seasonal river. " Other rivers, which originate from the Mau are

similarly affected by the destruction and their future is now

uncertain " , the minister observed. One of the recommendations to end

this destruction and save the forest, Michuki said was to bring to an

immediate end, to illegal logging, track down and bring to book the

buyers of the timber. The government, he added should look for

alternative land for those people who were duped and bought part of

the forest land while the rest should be evicted. Michuki said it was

saddening to note that more than 80 per-cent of the country's land

mass was arid and yet some greedy people wanted to destroy the

remaining 20 per-cent which was agriculturally viable.

http://www.kbc.co.ke/story.asp?ID=49938

 

Puerto Rico:

 

23) " Annual precipitation on the Caribbean island of Puerto Rico

decreased steadily during the 20th century, on average by 16 %. The

reduced rainfall manifested itself in the form of regular water

rationings during the 1990s which hit millions of inhabitants.

Simultaneous with the reduction in rainfall there was widespread

deforestation, notably in the coastal lowlands. This paper examines

the link between the reduction in precipitation and the land cover

change using a combination of energy balance measurements and

mesoscale atmospheric modelling. The explanation of the reduction in

precipitation appears to be quite different than expected. Based on

measurements made earlier over rainforest and pasture in the Amazon, a

forest covered island would be expected to be cooler because the

higher transpiration -of the forest compared to grassland- tends to

cool the surface. During an intensive measurement campaign on Puerto

Rico, the opposite appeared to be the case: transpiration by a coastal

wetland forest proved to be less than that for a grassland. In

addition, the forest albedo was 8 % lower than that for grassland.

Together, these two factors caused the sensible heat flux over the

forest to be twice as high as that over the grassland, whereas forest

evaporation was lower. The surface energy balance observations over

forest and grassland were used to derive proper land surface

parameterizations, which were implemented in a mesoscale atmospheric

circulation model (RAMS) to simulate the meteorological effects of

island wide deforestation. The model simulations indicated that the

development of a sea breeze during the day dominates climate on the

island. Sea breezes develop when the land surface is warmer than the

surrounding ocean. In model runs, where the island was assumed to be

completely covered with forest, the sea breeze was considerably

stronger than in model runs where the vegetation had been transformed

to grassland. Along the sea breeze front, convergence caused upward

air motions. As this happens more strongly over a forested island,

more clouds are formed but at a higher elevation, with an estimated

10-20 % enhancement of precipitation compared to a deforested island.

In the deforested scenario the cloud base was typically lowered by 200

m.

http://climatesci.org/2008/05/09/another-paper-on-the-role-of-landscape-change-o\

n-the-climate-

system-van-der-molen-et-al/

 

 

Dominican Republic:

 

24) Two prestigious ecologists yesterday warned that Dominican

Republic must protect its forests to prevent droughts and the

extinction of many endemic species, threatened by the high depredation

levels. Biologist and National District Environmental Information

Center director Milcíades Mejía, and Botanical Garden director Ricardo

Garcia, in a ceremony to mark Arbor Day, said there's a need to face

the danger of extinction of Dominican Republic's different species.

The municipal authorities celebrated Arbor Day with the participation

of hundreds of students from Santo Domingo public and private schools.

Mejía, a former director of the Botanical Gardens, urged the citizens

to protect the biodiversity and together with the entire population,

create awareness on the need to preserve the environment. Mejía and

Garcia headed the event aimed at protecting forests.

http://www.dominicantoday.com/dr/local/2008/5/8/27910/As-Dominican-forests-are-r\

avaging-of-end

emic-special-vanish-ecologist-warn

 

 

Guyana:

 

25) GEORGETOWN — A U.S. logging company has won the rights to harvest

trees in a large portion of Guyana's Amazon rainforest, the company

said Tuesday. The timber concession, awarded to Simon & Shock

International, is one of Guyana's five largest, covering 988,400 acres

near the Brazilian border. The South Haven, Mich.-based company will

invest at least $26 million to develop the area, Chief Executive Kelly

Simon said. A harvesting license will be granted once the company

completes an environmental impact study and inventories the trees,

Agriculture and Forestry Minister Robert Persaud said. Guyana, a

former British and Dutch colony, has offered to ban commercial

development of its rainforest if compensated by the international

community and already has preserved some areas.

http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/ap/fn/5754869.html

 

 

Costa Rica:

 

26) Half a century after most of Costa Rica's rain forests were cut

down, researchers from the Boyce Thompson Institute for Plant Sciences

(BTI) on the Cornell campus are attempting what many thought was

impossible -- restoring a tropical rain forest ecosystem. When the

researchers planted worn-out cattle pastures in Costa Rica with a

sampling of local trees in the early 1990s, native species of plants

began to move in and flourish, raising the hope that destroyed rain

forests could one day be replaced. Ten years after the tree plantings,

Cornell graduate student Jackeline Salazar counted the species of

plants that took up residence in the shade of the new planted areas.

She found remarkably high numbers of species -- more than 100 in each

plot. And many of the new arrivals were also to be found in nearby

remnants of the original forests. " By restoring forests we hope not

only to be improving the native forests, but we are helping to control

erosion and helping the quality of life of the local people, " said

Carl Leopold, the William H. Crocker Scientist Emeritus at BTI. He

pointed out that drinking water becomes more readily available when

forests thrive because tree roots act as a sort of sponge, favoring

rainwater seepage and preventing water running off hills and draining

away. Fully rescuing a rain forest may take hundreds of years, but

Leopold, whose findings are published with Salazar in the March 2008

issue of Ecological Restoration, said the study's results are

promising. " I'm surprised, " he said. " We're getting impressive growth

rates in the new forest trees. " The project started when Leopold

partnered with colleagues at the Ithaca-based Tropical Forestry

Initiative; in 1993 they began by planting mixtures of trees on

worn-out pasture land. For 50 years the soil had been compacted under

countless hooves, and its nutrients washed away. When it rained,

Leopold said, the red soil appeared to bleed from the hillsides. The

group chose local rain forest trees for planting, collecting seeds

from native trees in the community. " You can't buy [these] seeds, "

Leopold said. " So we passed the word around among our farmer

neighbors. " When a farmer reported a tree producing seeds, Leopold and

his wife would ride out on horses to collect the seeds before hungry

monkeys beat them to it.

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/04/080428133928.htm

 

Brazil:

 

27) Brazil on Thursday launched an ambitious sustainable development

plan for the Amazon that aims to lay down a new model for the vast

jungle area balancing economic and environmental priorities, President

Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva said. " We all understand that the Amazon

needs to develop, but we also understand that there had to be a

development model that is well thought-out, and not predatory, just

like we have in other regions of the country, " he said. The initiative

aims at laying down infrastructure works in nine Brazilian states that

are within the Amazon, opening credit lines to small farmers, and

adopting new criteria for the registration of people in the area. It

provides for various methods to fight deforestation and the illegal

occupation of public land. " There are people who think the Amazon

should belong to mankind. And we think that way, too. We think that it

needs to benefit everyone. But we also have to say loudly and clearly

that it is Brazil that is in charge of looking after the Amazon, " Lula

said. That was seen as a shot across the bow of foreign governments

and groups that want to pressure Brazil in terms of limitations on

Amazon development.

http://www.terradaily.com/reports/Brazil_launches_sustainable_development_plan_f\

or_Amazon_999.

html

 

 

28) Radiocarbon dating shows that trees in Amazon forests grow very

slowly compared to their temperate climate counterparts and can live

to be surprisingly old. As the world's largest tropical rainforest,

the Amazon plays a major part in the Earth's changing climate. Susan

Trumbore will discuss her studies of Amazon forest dynamics, including

the consequences of slow growth rates for forest management and the

degree to which these forests might soak up fossil fuel carbon

dioxide. Trumbore, chair of the Department of Earth System Science, is

the founding director of the Center for Global Environmental Change

Research and the UCI Institute for Geophysics and Planetary Physics.

Together with Ellen Druffel and John Southon, Trumbore established the

W.M. Keck Carbon Cycle Accelerator Mass Spectrometry Facility at UCI

in 2002. She served as the first elected president of the

Biogeosciences Section of the American Geophysical Union and has been

elected a fellow of the AGU and the American Association for the

Advancement of Science. http://media-newswire.com/release_1066128.html

 

29) The new study identifies a link between red

ucing sulphur dioxide emissions from burning coal and increasing sea

surface temperatures in the tropical north Atlantic, resulting in a

heightened risk of drought in the Amazon rainforest. The Amazon

rainforest contains about one tenth of the total carbon stored in land

ecosystems and recycles a large fraction of the rainfall that falls

upon it. So any major change to its vegetation, brought about by

events like deforestation or drought, has an impact on the global

climate system. Co-Author Dr Carlos Nobre of the Brazilian Institute

for Space Research adds: " Global warming, deforestation and increased

forest fires are all acting in synergy to reduce the resilience of the

Amazonian forests. " Sulphate aerosol particles arising from the

burning of coal in power stations in the 1970s and 1980s have

partially reduced global warming by reflecting sunlight and making

clouds brighter. This pollution has been predominantly in the northern

hemisphere and has acted to limit warming in the tropical north

Atlantic, keeping the Amazon wetter than it would otherwise be. Chris

Huntingford of CEH, another of the co-authors, explains: " Reduced

sulphur emissions in North America and Europe will see tropical

rain-bands move northwards as the north Atlantic warms, resulting in a

sharp increase in the risk of Amazonian drought. " Lead author

Professor Peter Cox of the University of Exeter sums-up the

consequences of the study: " These findings are another reminder of the

complex nature of environmental change. To improve air quality and

safeguard public health, we must continue to reduce aerosol pollution,

but our study suggests that this needs to be accompanied by urgent

reductions in carbon dioxide emissions to minimize the risk of Amazon

forest dieback. "

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2008/05/080507133259.htm

 

30) Satellite photos show that Amazon destruction has dropped sharply

since the onset of a massive crackdown on illegal logging by Brazil's

government. Brazil's National Space Research Institute says the

region's deforestation rate dropped by 80% in March over February,

when federal police launched a massive operation shutting down

clandestine sawmills. Police inspector Alvaro Palharini told the Folha

de S. Paulo newspaper Wednesday that 4,000 trucks, 19 chain saws, 10

guns and 95 vehicles have been seized in the operation. Still,

environmentalists question month-to-month comparisons, preferring to

compare monthly data to the same period of the previous year.

http://www.usatoday.com/news/world/environment/2008-05-07-brazil-logging_N.htm

 

Ecuador:

 

31) An illegal logger has been speared to death by Amazon natives in

Ecuador's Yasuní National Park, officials say. The killing, which

occurred March 4, reflects mounting tensions between natives and

illegal loggers working in one of South America's most prized parks.

It also follows allegations made in February that as many as 15

Amazonian tribal members were beheaded by timber poachers in the

region. The death of the logger was confirmed by a spokesperson at the

Orellana provincial police headquarters in Coca, Ecuador (see Ecuador

map). The Ecuadorian newspaper El Comercio published a photograph of

the scene, showing the body of the logger, Luis Mariano Castellano

Espinosa, riddled with wooden spears protruding from his chest and

legs. The killing appeared to be the work of members of the Taromenane

tribe, judging from the type of spear used, police captain Edwin Ruiz

told the newspaper. The attack took place in the rain forest of

1.9-million-acre (758,000-hectare) Yasuní park, which has been

designated as a biosphere reserve by the United Nations. Yasuní is

rich in marketable trees such as cedar and contains a quarter of

Ecuador's untapped oil reserves. The park is also home to Amazon

natives such as the Taromenane and Tagaeri, two tribes living in

voluntary isolation within the park's " untouchable zone, " where

logging and oil exploration are prohibited. But loggers operate with

impunity in parts of the park due to lack of enforcement, critics have

charged, and violent clashes have resulted. The murder is the most

recent confrontation in Yasuní, where the government has now

established a permanent military presence to stop illegal logging, a

move that natives and rights groups had long demanded. " [There] are

powerful economic interests " involved in the park's future, said Diego

Falconi, a top advisor to the Ecuadorian police. " [but the government]

is committed to resolve it. " The recent killing comes on the heels of

a government probe into an alleged massacre of natives in Yasuní. On

February 6 native groups reported that witnesses in the area had said

that between 5 and 15 Taromenani and Tagaeri tribesmen had been

killed, possibly beheaded, by illegal loggers when the tribal members

raided a logging camp. A team of Ecuadorian police, soldiers, and

officials from the Ministry of the Environment were dispatched to the

zone to investigate but said it came up empty-handed. " No evidence was

found of the incident in question, " according to the government's

official report, provided to National Geographic News by the

environment ministry.

http://ecuador-rising.blogspot.com/2008/05/spearing-beheadings-reported-in-ecuad\

or.html

 

Colombia:

 

32) On Jan. 23, the Constitutional Court declared the Forest Law of

2006 unconstitutional for " having omitted in its expedition the

requisite of consulting indigenous and tribal communities, as stated

in Article 6 of Convention 169 in the International Labor Organization

(ILO). Indeed, this 53-article law was not discussed with the

indigenous and Afro-Colombian communities who are collectively owners

of between 43 and 53 million hectares (106 and 131 million acres) that

comprise the greater part of the 65 million hectares (161 million

acres) Colombia is estimated to have in natural forests, but for

experts this political decision really saved Colombia's native

forests. Attorney General Edgardo Maya had already warned about the

serious consequences that the Forest Law would bring to the Colombian

ecosystem because " it revokes norms established in 1959 on the

creation of national parks that protect water-producing glaciers and

hydrographic basins in [Colombia], considered one of the greatest

water potentials in the world. " In turn, Senator Jorge Enrique

Robledo, of the Independent Democratic Pole party, hit the nail on the

head when he stressed that the principal purpose of the law was to

exploit timber: " The project does not intend to do anything besides

handing over management of forest reserves and natural forests to

multi-national loggers, introducing elements today outside of relevant

legislation, such as the concession and association to manage forest

areas, which it puts in reach of the multi-national companies'

financial interests, " Robledo said before Congress. But the law's

inability to be enforced not only saved the native forests, but also

managed to put the tremendous crisis — which forests have been

suffering for decades — back on the table. " The greatest deforester is

not coca, but rather the very government that legalizes deforestation,

naming illegal settlers owners of the land, " claimed Professor Orlando

Rangel of the Natural Sciences Institute in the National University of

Colombia. " The country's deforestation rate, according to government

statistics, for illicit cultivation is approximately 3,000 hectares

(7,410 acres) annually. The other cause of deforestation is the yearly

introduction of 320,000 hectares (790,400 acres) of new land to

agriculture and the annual use of 257,000 hectares (617,500 acres) of

native forest for wood. This means 580,000 hectares (1,432,600 acres)

are deforested each year, " Rangel claims, according to his own

calculations. " The most serious issue, " he adds, " is that Colombia

does not have a natural vegetation map and we are always talking based

on what we suppose exists. We urgently need a cartographic map. "

http://www.latinamericapress.org/article.asp?lanCode=1 & artCode=5612

 

Chile:

 

33) AYSEN — The Patagonian region of southern Chile is considered one

of the world's last, great wildernesses, dubbed an " eco-gem " for its

rare fauna, ice-sculptured fjords and almost total absence of

industrial development. But development is threatening this pristine

wilderness, driven in part by money from two of Canada's largest

public-sector retirement funds. The CPP Investment Board and British

Columbia Investment Management Corp. have stakes in a vast electricity

project planned for this natural area, putting the organizations on a

collision course with Chilean and North American environmentalists,

and into the middle of a heated national debate over energy

development in the Latin American country. The two funds, along with

Toronto conglomerate Brookfield Asset Management Inc., are the

controlling shareholders of Transelec Chile SA, a power-grid operator

considering a 2,300-kilometre transmission line that would require one

of the world's longest clear-cuts, a logged corridor 80 metres wide,

much of it set to slice through temperate forests of a type found

nowhere outside Patagonia. Ecologists reel off a lengthy rap sheet of

the damage the dam project is likely to cause, including the flooding

of 60 square kilometres in the river basins, fertility loss in

downstream soil and habitat destruction of endemic plant and animal

species, including the huemul, an Andean deer so rare that its

population has dropped below 3,000. But activists believe the power

lines, which could have an impact on 14 national parks or nature

reserves, could prove even more damaging to Patagonia's fragile

ecosystems. " The transmission line will have a bigger impact than the

dams themselves, " said Peter Hartmann, Aysen-based director of Chile's

National Committee for the Defence of Flora and Fauna. " Whatever route

they take, it's simply not possible to avoid a great many national

parks, nature reserves and conservation areas. "

http://www.topix.com/ca/toronto-on/2008/05/canadian-pensioners-and-chiles-pristi\

ne-wilderness

 

Latin America:

 

 

34) Latin America, home to some of the world's richest forest areas,

is playing a critical role in developing viable carbon-based schemes

to preserve and promote forest conservation. Emerging international

carbon mechanisms are continually changing, however. Plantar, a

Brazilian iron foundry company, epitomises the project and market

complexities that such uncertainty brings. The pig iron producer,

based in Minas Gerais, Brazil, was considering changing from charcoal

from eucalyptus trees to coal in its production processes, a switch

that would have resulted in greatly increased carbon emissions. To

persuade it otherwise, the World Bank stepped in with its Prototype

Carbon Fund to facilitate funding for a 23,100-hectare commercial

eucalyptus plantation in 2001. It was hoped that the additional carbon

sequestered by the planted trees would qualify the project for credits

under the Kyoto Protocol's Carbon Development Mechanism (CDM).

However, the Plantar initiative quickly became a flashpoint for

critics of monoculture tree plantations inspired under the Kyoto

Protocol mechanisms. A coalition of over 50 Brazilian non-profit

groups, unions and other civil society movements have publicly

condemned the 'carbon sink' project as " unsustainable " and

" climatically worthless " . They cite long-standing claims that credits

for the temporary storage of carbon by forests fail to counterbalance

the permanent release of fossil-stored carbon (see SinksWatchs'

report, 'Forest Fraud'). The World Rainforest Movement, a

Uruguayan-based non-profit organisation, also draws attention to the

absence of socio-economic development benefits from the Plantar

project – a criticism echoed by indigenous groups and other

forest-based communities in the region. Yet more evidence of the

project's negative social and environmental impacts is provided in the

recent 'Carbon Connection' documentary. Produced by the environmental

group Carbon Trade Watch, the film finds evidence of water scarcity

and a resultant reduction in native biodiversity. After three

attempts, the Plantar project was approved by the CDM Executive board

last August. However, the scheme is now registered under altered

criteria based on methane sequestration during the eucalyptus-burning

process. http://www.climatechangecorp.com/content.asp?ContentID=5305

 

India:

 

 

35) The socially conscious citizens in Hyderabad held a protest rally

against the cutting of a centuries old Banyan Tree in front of Paigah

palace, an heritage monument in the city and till recently it was the

office of the Hyderabad Urban Development Authority (HUDA) and now

temporarily housing the US consulate, scheduled to start functioning

soon. Promienst citizens like Dr. P.M. Bhargava, Narendra Luther,

Dr.Kulsum Reddy, Prof. C Ramachandraiah, Mrs.Bharati Surya Rao and

Sajjad Shahid were present in the protest. Forum for a Better

Hyderabad (FBH) president M Vedkumar led them. Last Monday, a 200

years old huge banyan tree, was mercilessly axed except for its bare

trunk, by the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation (GHMC)

authorities at the request of the U.S.Consulate for road widening.

Along with that 32 Ashoka trees within the approach road were also

chopped off for a price of Rs. 50 each were also axed. Road widening

cannot be a valid reason for chopping the banyan tree. Road widening

plan could provide for skirting around such an ancient tree, which

gives a character to the location, as is done in the case of religious

structures. With a little imagination and expertise, this could have

been done. Unfortunately, these type of decisions not merely reflect a

lack of these qualities, but also exhibit a dangerous trend toward

insensitivity and violence toward nature. Further, the authorities

never consult the civil society organizations on these difficult

issues, they have enough time to do so as road widening plans are not

made in a day but over months and years, and the planners would

precisely know the blocks to road widening much in advance. Instead,

they prefer unilateral action which is irretrievable.

http://www.mynews.in/fullstory.aspx?storyid=4670

 

 

36) Kullu - Over 35,000 trees are being cut down to facilitate the

construction of the 192 MV Allain Duhangan hydro power project in

Kullu District of Himachal Pradesh.

Villagers are protesting the massive deforestation. As such they are

protesting against such power projects since a couple of others have

also been planned elsewhere in the State. They allege that the

Government did not inform them about the felling of trees.

Around 1200 trees have already been illegally cut by the personnel

associated with the Allain Duhangan project. " They did not give us any

information or asked us our consent to build these power lines. They

did it on their own with some middle men being involved in it. The

environment department gave NOC to them and asked them to take

suggestions and with a proper enquiry with the Panchayat and the

villagers to set up the project. But they purposely have fitted power

lines between the orchards and the fields which is not acceptable, "

said Lal Chand, a farmer. The entire Kullu District, Nalagadh region

and Mandi areas will be affected with the felling of trees. " Forest

Department says that around 10,000 trees will be cut which itself is a

huge lot. The Government should realise that the condition of the

state, jungles would not exist at this rate of trees being chopped, "

said Daulat Bharti, an environmentalist. There are other such projects

on the pipeline, which will also require felling of trees in large

numbers. On this score, Minister of Forests, Jagat Prakash Nadda said

that the engineers of Allain Duhangan project did not evaluate the

consequences. The Government will try to build a common transmission

line for the other projects, which are also coming up. This common

transmission will be beneficial to transmit electricity and there

wouldn't be much loss. "

http://www.dailyindia.com/show/238111.php/Deforestation-in-Kullu-for-the-Allain-\

Duhangan-hydr

opower-project

 

Pakistan:

 

37) Federal Minister for Environment, Mr. Hameed Ullah Jan Afridi said

Government is committed to initiate new projects for development of

the forests so as to mitigate the environmental threats in the area.

He expressed these views while talking to the Provincial Minister for

Irrigation and Power, Mr. Muhammad Humayun Khan along with Member

Provincial Assembly Muhammad Ali Shah who called on the Federal

Minister for Environment, Mr. Hameed Ullah Jan Afridi on Wednesday.

They discussed matters pertaining to environmental issues of the

province particularly Batkhela and Dargai areas, here today. The

Provincial Minister said that there is a need to develop park and

establish Zoo in the Kali toria Batkhela areas. Speaking on the

occasion the Federal Minister said that Government is committed to

initiate new projects for development of the forests so as to mitigate

the environmental threats in the area. He assured the provincial

minister for all possible support would be extended for tackling the

environmental issues particularly fencing the Sawat canal to make it

safer for humans and animals.

http://www.onlinenews.com.pk/details.php?id=127754

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...