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--Today for you 33 new articles about earth's trees! (387th edition)

--You can now RSS tree news in a regional format at:

http://forestpolicyresearch.org

--To Subscribe / to the world-wide email format send a

blank email to:

earthtreenews- OR

earthtreenews-

 

In this Issue:

 

BC-Canada EU-Africa-Mid-East World-wide

 

Index:

 

--British Columbia: 1) WFP may profit as much as $70 million for

selling stolen land, 2) Increased water flows from pine beetle deaths,

3) New economics related to foraging in B.C. forests, 4) Enviros use

wrong poster in posterchild campaign, 5) New effort to thrive off

logging waste, 6) Faux GBR deal leads to genuine citizen action

campaign to demand consultation / protection, 7) Salmon habitat

restoration project,

--Canada: 8) New Russian Log export taxes accelerate Canadian export

opportunities, 9) Kimberly-Clark protest to save the Boreal, 10)

Renegade scientist proposes reforesting cities with medicinal trees,

11) Ten sawmills mills down to only one sawmill and it's a mystery as

to why?

--UK: 12) Wytham Woods is the new European hub for climate studies,

13) Search for the elusive Pine-Martin, 14) Turkey Oaks return to

benefit their pre ice-age habitat,

--Ireland: 15) State ownership for forests is more valuable

--Bulgaria: 16) Low elevation ski resort boondoggle

--Portugal: 17) Pine wilt disease, 18) Cork maker promotes buying cork

for eco reasons,

--Spain: 19) One of the remaining stands of the forests that once

stretched without break

--Ghana: 20) Next round of UN Climate talks starts here on 8/21

--Uganda: 21) He will nurture forests and fight encroachment until his

last breath,

--Malawi: 22) They imposed a ban on the export of hardwood

--Congo: 23) How will they cancel 75% of 156 logging deals

--Rwanda: 24) Red Cross to plant 600,000 trees

--Nigeria: 25) Perennial devastation of the Anambra must stop before

it's too late

--Central Africa: 26) WWF / FSC green claims

--World-wide: 27) 3 worst companies abusing tribal people, 28)

Documentary: The Burning Season, 29) Intergovernmental Panel on

Climate Change, 30) Race to grab land in developing countries, 31) How

oxygen levels change over time, 32) Does WWF ever really save what

they claim to save? 33) They are our elders,

 

Articles:

 

British Columbia:

 

1) Since the heady days of the Clayoquot Sound logging blockades, few

issues on Vancouver Island have triggered such public outrage as the

proposed sale of thousands of hectares of forestland on Victoria's

doorstep. That outrage only intensified last month after B.C. Auditor

General John Doyle issued a blistering report criticizing the

provincial government for failing to consider the public interest when

granting Western Forest Products (WFP) the right to sell these lands.

When news of a potential buyer surfaced last year, hundreds of

woodworkers, environmentalists, First Nations and outdoor enthusiasts

protested at community meetings and before elected municipal and

regional councils from the provincial capitol, through Sooke, Jordan

River and Otter Point. Surfers and loggers alike correctly saw that

the sale would mean a proliferation of houses and roads where forests

once stood, and an end to carefully developed regional growth plans

that embraced sustainable development by limiting urban sprawl. The

controversy goes back to January 2007, when the provincial government

gave debt-ridden WFP permission to break a long-standing social

contract. That social contract saw forest companies get generous tax

breaks and access to public timber in exchange for bundling their

private holdings into tree-farm licenses and managing both their

private and public forestlands under the same set of rules. By

allowing WFP to decouple its private forestlands from B.C.'s publicly

managed forest resources, the province set the stage for the company

to sell the lands for so-called " higher and better uses, " a move that

could potentially see WFP's shareholders reap a $70 million windfall.

It now falls to newly appointed Forests Minster Pat Bell to deal with

the mess left by his predecessor Rich Coleman. With an election less

than a year away, Bell has little time to make it right. But make it

right he can, and here's how. http://thetyee.ca/Views/2008/08/18/FLR/

 

2) At Rockin's River Resort north of Prince George, British Columbia,

Horst Schulz is experiencing a consequence not often associated with

the mountain pine beetle epidemic. " The flooding has gotten tremendous

now that all the pine are dead, " Schulz said. " I had to take a boat to

the house for about a week this year. " Schulz said high water forced

him to push his campground's opening date back an entire month this

year, from May 15 to June 15. " There is an issue with hydrology, " said

Jim Snetsinger, British Columbia's chief forester. " These trees aren't

there any longer to suck up water from the ground. Where does it go? "

Hydrology joins other smaller concerns such as water quality and

blocked accesses in looking at the fallout from the North American

West's massive mountain pine beetle epidemic. With 33.3 million acres

already impacted by the mountain pine beetle in British Columbia,

Snetsinger is estimating it will be 10 to 15 years before the

province's hydro balance returns. None¬theless, Snetsinger said there

are too many other factors at play to blame the type of increased

runoffs Schulz experienced on the pine beetle alone. Andy Cadenhead

expects similar impacts in Colorado. Of particular concern are slides

and other mass soil movements that may occur when the ground is

saturated with water formerly absorbed by lodgepole pine trees. " One

thing that appears to be happening was while these trees were green,

they were taking up an incredible amount of water, " said Cadenhead, a

Steamboat Springs-based supervisory forester with the U.S. Forest

Service. " We'll see the water table essentially rise in the forest. If

we get wet years, it will certainly increase our flooding potential. "

Like Snetsinger, Caden¬head said flooding is a minor concern when

considering the impacts of the mountain pine beetle epidemic. Another

risk is falling trees, not just ones that could hit people, but also

ones that could block roads and trails. " I think it's safe to say

there's a time period of about 15 years where most of the trees are

going to come down, " Cadenhead said.

http://www.steamboatpilot.com/news/2008/aug/17/dead_trees_cause_many_dangers/

 

3) Foraging in B.C. forests is suddenly something to be reckoned with.

It's graduated to the post-secondary level. One of the projects

undertaken by The Centre for Non-Timber Resources at Royal Roads

University in Victoria is Buy B.C. Wild, which has sponsorship from

the Ministry of Agriculture and Lands, Thrifty Foods, VanCity and

Service Canada. " We realized there were a lot of wild products coming

out of our forests and there was a need for wildcrafters and

businesses to have a collective voice to showcase their wonderful

products and services, " says Holly Caine, coordinator of Buy B.C.

Wild. A website directory listing 150 purveyors of wild food, herbs

and craft material from B.C. forests showcases the non-logging side of

our forests. (See www.buybcwild.com) Some of the businesses selling

edible products made from wild foraged plants are listed below. " What

we're trying to promote are the people who access the resources in our

communities and provide local products, " says Caine. While Vancouver

Island's timberlands are mainly private, in the rest of the province,

about 70 per cent is Crown land, she says. " One of the really

important things to the centre, as the sector emerges are policies

regarding sustainability and guidelines on how to forage and we'd like

to see money go back into the communities, " she says. Currently, the

best source of information on where and how to forage is district

forest offices. " You need to contact them to let them know of your

intentions. People also have to be aware of first nations cultural use

of medicinal plants. A harvesting area might have been used for

centuries and they have cultural and heritage rights to that area. " On

Vancouver Island, she says, " everybody knows how wonderful and

nutritional our native plants are. Our blueberries are amazingly

nutritious with phytonutrients. "

http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/arts/story.html?id=e29fc2f6-c90d-4994-a7\

dc-dc1908be245a

 

4) There was extensive international news coverage of the " Save the

Clayoquot " rally in Tofino on Aug. 2, with many reports suggesting

another war over old-growth logging was brewing in the West Coast

wilderness. But now it appears the location of a clearcut depicted in

a photograph at the rally used by Adrienne Carr, deputy leader of the

Green party, wasn't taken in Clayoquot Sound at all. The clearcut is

located in an active logging area managed by Interfor, and is located

five kilometres north of the UNESCO biosphere reserve boundary. " We're

not clearcutting and Miss Carr can get all the pictures she wants, but

she needs to be true on where those pictures are — that's not in our

territory, " said Joe Tom, chief councillor of the Hesquiaht First

Nation yesterday. Carr said yesterday she'd been told by the Friends

of Clayoquot Sound before the rally that the photo was taken within

the sound and Hesquiaht territory. She feels badly about the

misrepresentation " because I pride myself on accuracy. " I went ahead

and used that as an example of the kind of logging that we don't want

to see happening in a biosphere reserve. " The flap over the photo is

the latest exchange that pits environmentalists on one side, and First

Nations and the Coulson Group of Companies — who are working together

on logging in the Hesquiaht Point Creek watershed — on the other. The

environmentalists had threatened to take action if old-growth trees

were cut. Despite the error, Carr said she can't assume that clearcut

logging isn't happening in Clayoquot. " There just may not be photos

available of logging in that region by Coulson. I'm not prepared to

say that's not happening. The First Nations are logging the area to

help get its people out of poverty, said Tom.A truce was called two

weeks ago so both sides could discuss issues, but no meetings have

taken place, said Tom. " We've offered two meetings and we've had a

number of different excuses, " he said.

http://forestaction.wordpress.com/2008/08/16/green-party-duped-over-clayoquot-cl\

earcut/

 

5) WILLIAMS LAKE -- In the forested heart of British Columbia, Geoff

Wagner is walking through huge piles of woody debris, the kind of

stuff once considered trash by an industry that turns less than half

of every tree it cuts into 2x4s. But no longer. Today, those piles are

a vision of a future in which forests not only build houses but light

streets, and in which forest companies are no longer simple hewers of

wood but rather power players. It is already happening under plant

manager Wagner's watch, as Edmonton-based power producer Epcor Power

LP transforms chipped bark and railway ties into a constant stream of

electricity powering this part of central B.C. Soon, it will be

happening elsewhere as the West's biggest forest companies race to

build new facilities that will turn wasted wood into cash. B.C. Hydro

estimates companies could produce 470 megawatts of power this way, or

about 10 per cent of the province's annual energy production. Forest

companies say this could be just the beginning, as B.C. serves as the

pilot for a model of forest power that could be replicated across the

country. It is, however, Wagner's plant that is in many ways the pilot

for B.C. The largest biomass power plant on the continent, the

Williams Lake facility produces 66 megawatts of electricity -- enough

to power 65,000 homes -- from a steady stream of chipped wood burning

in a 1,000-degree Celsius inferno.

http://www.canada.com/victoriatimescolonist/news/story.html?id=7ee06695-228d-41e\

9-914b-343b1b6

650d5

 

6) Bella Bella - The Vickers family traveled to the threatened

Ingram-Mooto watershed in Heiltsuk traditional territory on Friday,

July 25, 2008. During this time, they erected signs in the

Ingram-Mooto that demand the halt of any road building and logging

plans. " The lack of consultation has left us no choice now as a family

to make a move, " - Heiltsuk Vickers family statement. " It's a tough

call, we as a community should be benefiting from this operation. "

Located just 52km north of Bella Bella, Ingram-Mooto is in Spiller

Inlet, known to the Heiltsuk as 'Glditas Daqvu'. We respectfully ask

that our community be consulted on the economic benefit to our Nation.

Will there be a long-term benefit to the Heiltsuk, or just a few

short-term jobs? We would also like assurances that the logging and

road building will not damage other local resources. " The short-term

benefits vs. long-term damage to the land. The fact that First Nations

have to follow EBM guidelines and Industry carries on business as

usual. The high-grading of Cedar is devastating to us as Heiltsuk. " -

Don Vickers, elder/fisherman. " As a Heiltsuk family, we are tired of

not being told what is happening in our traditional territories! There

are many of us. We deserve an opportunity to have a say on the impacts

on behalf of future generations. I cannot again stress the importance

of Cedar and Wild salmon to our survival, as a Nation. " - Mary Vickers

http://forestaction.wordpress.com/2008/08/15/heiltsuk-vickers-family-takes-stand\

-for-threatened

-ingram-mooto-watershed/

 

7) UCLUELET — For the 13th season in a row, the Central Westcoast

Forest Society is leading a team of partners in a salmon habitat

restoration project. Since its inception in 1995, the non-profit

society and its partners have restored over 78 kilometres of stream,

rehabilitated 66 hectares of riparian habitat, stabilized 48 hectares

of landslide area, and deactivated 247 kilometres of forestry road.

The areas, on the Kennedy Flats between Ucluelet and Tofino, include

sections of Pacific Rim National Park Reserve. This season, the

continued restoration focus is on Lost Shoe Creek. This includes

riparian and stream maintenance, stream restoration, and a smolt fence

(operated by the Thornton Creek Salmon Enhancement Society) for

monitoring the number of salmon heading for ocean habitat. Lost Shoe

Creek exits though Pacific Rim National Park Reserve, and while this

area is now in the park, this was not always so. It wasn't until 1972

that Macmillan Bloedel Ltd. donated areas of its logging tenure to the

park, but not before the Lost Shoe Creek area was extensively logged.

" We were worried about a restoration program even starting this year, "

said Warren Warttig, secretary treasurer for the Central Westcoast

Forest Society. " But Mamook-Coulsons stepped up to the plate with

their Forest Investment Account funding and while Iisaak has supported

us in the past, they were unable to help this season " . " The issue with

FIA funding is that it can only be invested on provincial crown land,

which does now allow for continuation of restoration within the park, "

said Don McMillan, president of the CWFS. " Thankfully our application

to BC Transmission Corporation came through with a grant for $10,000.

This has allowed for this year's program to proceed on lower Lost Shoe

and help Parks Canada with their ecological integrity mandate. "

http://www.westcoaster.ca/modules/AMS/article.php?storyid=4776

 

Canada:

 

8) A looming Russian tax on log exports could push markets for North

American wood products into the most dramatic supply-side shock since

the northern spotted owl crisis of the 1990s, a report by Vancouver

consultant Russ Taylor forecasts. And that has some coastal loggers

saying it could open up new opportunities for the beleaguered

sector. " Russia is a huge exporter of logs. A restriction in the amount

of logs coming out of Russia will create demand elsewhere, so it could

be an extremely positive thing, " said Dave Lewis, executive director

of the B.C. Truck Loggers Association. " But we still have to be able

to access [potential markets], " he said, referring to restrictions on

B.C. log exports. Taylor, president of the International Wood Markets

Group, said in a monthly research report that the Russians are on

track to raise the export tax on raw logs from its current rate of 25

per cent to 80 per cent effective Jan. 1, 2009. That's going to

squeeze European, Chinese and Japanese log supplies, sending a ripple

effect into North America's currently depressed log and lumber

markets.Already, Chinese delegations are sending out feelers to B.C.

in their search for supply to replace Russian exports, should the tax

go into effect as proposed, forest company TimberWest Forest reported

last week. Russia is the world's largest exporter of raw logs,

supplying 40 per cent of the world's softwood logs. Taylor said the

shock of such a price increase on Russian logs is not well understood

within North American wood products markets because most Russian sales

are to China, Finland and Japan. But in today's global economy, a

disruption in one supply chain has worldwide repercussions.

http://www.amazon.com/Spell-Sensuous-Perception-Language-More-Than-Human/dp/0679\

776397

 

9) Environmental activists are currently reading a damning report

about forest destruction in Canada's Boreal Forest to Kimberley-Clark

employees at their area office. The activists, who are floating in a

boat in a lake at the center of the Kleenex-makers office complex and

using a bullhorn to make sure they are heard, are part of an

international campaign to force Kimberly-Clark to stop purchasing pulp

from destructive logging operations and to increase its use of

recycled materials for its disposable products such as Kleenex and

Cottonelle. " Greenpeace demands that Kimberly-Clark stop wiping away

our treasured, ancient forests to make disposable products like tissue

and toilet paper, " said Lindsey Allen, Greenpeace forest campaigner.

" Greenpeace is here to directly communicate with Kimberly-Clark

employees so they can encourage their company's leadership to stop

using endangered forests such as the Boreal to make products that are

used once and then thrown away. " Greenpeace is particularly interested

in communicating with Ken Strassner, Kimberley-Clark's Vice President

of Global Environment, Safety, Regulatory and Scientific Affairs, who

works out of the Roswell office. Strassner no doubt knows of the

recent Greenpeace report that shows how Kimberly-Clark devastated

Ontario's Kenogami Forest while promoting itself as a socially

responsible environmental leader. The report, " Cut and Run:

Kimberly-Clark's Legacy of Environmental Devastation, " uses government

information, independent audits, public records, and satellite mapping

to document Kimberly-Clark's management and logging of the Kenogami

Forest near Thunder Bay, Ontario. It details how, in just 70 years,

the Kenogami Forest has been turned from a vast expanse of healthy,

near-pristine forest to a severely damaged landscape rife with social

and environmental problems--largely to make products that are used

once and then thrown away.

http://yubanet.com/enviro/Activists-Set-Sail-at-Kimberly-Clark-Roswell-Office.ph\

p

 

10) Ms. Beresford-Kroeger, 63, is a native of Ireland who has

bachelor's degrees in medical biochemistry and botany, and has worked

as a Ph.D.-level researcher at the University of Ottawa school of

medicine, where she published several papers on the chemistry of

artificial blood. She calls herself a renegade scientist, however,

because she tries to bring together aboriginal healing, Western

medicine and botany to advocate an unusual role for trees. She favors

what she terms a bioplan, reforesting cities and rural areas with

trees according to the medicinal, environmental, nutritional,

pesticidal and herbicidal properties she claims for them, which she

calls ecofunctions. Wafer ash, for example, could be used in organic

farming, she said, planted in hedgerows to attract butterflies away

from crops. Black walnut and honey locusts could be planted along

roads to absorb pollutants, she said. " Her ideas are a rare, if not

entirely new approach to natural history, " said Edward O. Wilson, a

Harvard biologist who wrote the foreword for her 2003 book, " Arboretum

America " (University of Michigan Press). " The science of selecting

trees for different uses around the world has not been well studied. "

Miriam Rothschild, the British naturalist who died in 2005, wrote

glowingly of Ms. Beresford-Kroeger's idea of bioplanning and called it

" one answer to 'Silent Spring' " because it uses natural chemicals

rather than synthetic ones. But some of Ms. Beresford-Kroeger's claims

for the health effects of trees reach far outside the mainstream.

Although some compounds found in trees do have medicinal properties

and are the subject of research and treatment, she jumps beyond the

evidence to say they also affect human health in their natural forms.

The black walnut, for example, contains limonene, which is found in

citrus fruit and elsewhere and has been shown to have anticancer

effects in some studies of laboratory animals. Ms. Beresford-Kroeger

has suggested, without evidence, that limonene inhaled in aerosol form

by humans will help prevent cancer. " She holds fast to the notion that

if you are in the aura of a black walnut tree there's a healing

effect, " Mr. Lemkay said. " It needs more science to be able to say

that. " http://www.nytimes.com/2008/08/12/science/12prof.html

 

11) There's a mystery going on in the north. Three years ago, the

Buchanan group of forestry companies had 10 mills operating, and was

Ontario's largest lumber-producing organization. Now, due to the

downturn in lumber markets, it has one mill operating at only half

capacity, and it is supplying that mill from old-growth trees in the

10,876-square-kilometre Ogoki Forest, 250 kilometres northeast of

Thunder Bay. Cutting this old growth means destroying habitat for

woodland caribou. Why, does the Ontario government tolerate this? Why

doesn't it require Buchanan to log in one of the other areas where it

has a licence to cut – in an area where the forest is second growth,

and habitat for caribou was largely destroyed a long time ago? Cutting

in the old-growth is more desirable for Buchanan, because the farther

north you go, the more uniform is the spruce forest. There aren't as

many of the unwanted, low-grade hardwood trees that slow down cutting

of the spruce. The Ogoki Forest is the farthest north of any area in

Ontario where logging is allowed. Queen's Park would be perfectly

justified in telling Buchanan to cut elsewhere because it has been

formally alerted to the threat posed to caribou. An Independent Forest

Audit, completed two years ago, said " ... the Ministry (of Natural

Resources) must provide strong objective evidence that the projected

decline in habitat (in the Ogoki Forest) will not further endanger

caribou. " The audit team recommends that the ministry conduct an

objective assessment of the viability of the caribou population in the

forest, and that the results of the assessment be incorporated into

subsequent forest management plans. " No objective assessment was done,

and nothing was incorporated into the months-old current plan. The

audit on the Ogoki says that caribou habitat will be reduced by 57 per

cent by the time all the old-growth is cut, and logging of second

growth is slated to begin. Logging roads alone will reduce habitat by

at least 6 per cent. Aside from the audit report, research suggests

caribou don't return to areas that have been clear-cut, even after

second-growth trees have matured. There seems to be a pattern that

points to the government bending over backward to accommodate

Buchanan: It has ignored the audit recommendation to prove caribou

won't be further endangered by logging in the Ogoki. It approved a new

forest management plan that ignores the impact on caribou. It isn't

monitoring caribou movements adequately. It has provided subsidies to

build logging roads into the Ogoki.

http://www.thestar.com/News/Ideas/article/475067

 

UK:

 

12) This summer, Wytham Woods near Oxford in the UK will become the

European hub of an ambitious global research programme into the

impacts of climate change on forests. Earthwatch, the international

environmental charity, is pleased to announce the opening of its

Europe Regional Climate Centre* as part of the HSBC Climate

Partnership. Formed in 2007, the partnership brings together HSBC, the

Climate Group, Earthwatch, the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute

and WWF to tackle the urgent threat of climate change on people,

water, forests and cities. The Climate Centre will be the base for a

five-year climate change and forestry research programme. It is one of

five centres throughout the world. The others are located in Brazil,

India, China and North America. Teams of HSBC employees from all over

Europe and members of the Oxfordshire community will spend time

working alongside scientists at Wytham Woods. They will look at many

aspects of forest ecology from the flow of carbon within woodlands to

the response of populations of small mammals and insects to changes in

weather patterns. Between them, the teams will clock up an impressive

40,000 hours of field work, equivalent to a single scientist working

alone for 21 years. Earthwatch's Field Director Rowan Byrne is heading

up a team of local staff at the Climate Centre. He explains the

regional importance of the research programme. " Here in Oxfordshire,

we live on a floodplain. Forests play a crucial role in reducing the

impacts of heavy rainfall and protecting vulnerable communities from

the worst impacts of flooding, by holding water in the landscape and

releasing it slowly. As extreme flooding events are predicted to

become more frequent in a changing climate, it is increasingly

important that we maintain our already heavily impacted forests in as

healthy a state as possible. "

http://www.itnews.it/news/2008/0818010201483/ancient-woodland-in-oxfordshire-to-\

be-european-ba

se-for-international-climate-change-research-programme.html

 

13) FOREST chiefs are stepping up a local search for a rare and

elusive tree climbing mammal, written off as extinct in England only a

few years ago. Special cameras triggered by infra-red beams are being

installed in a remote North York Moors wood in a bid to capture an

image of a pine marten - the second rarest carnivore in Britain after

the wild cat. Although the pine marten is believed to have been

sighted in woods in the Osmotherley area, the exact location cannot be

disclosed. Four years ago forest chiefs, aided by local

conservationists, began a project to track down the creature, which

can grow up to two feet long, after an experienced naturalist made a

reliable sighting in the area. Sticky tubes baited with jam sandwiches

were deployed in a bid to collect hair samples from the phantom

sweet-toothed animal. More recently, boxes designed by the Vincent

Wildlife Trust have been erected to offer martens a ready-made home to

raise their young. Brian Walker, Forestry Commission wildlife officer

for the North York Moors, said: " The cameras are being trained on

feeding stations near the boxes and if anything breaks the invisible

beam any time of the day or night, the shutter will be activated. " My

gut feeling is that we do have pine martens, but they are few in

number, nocturnal, and often in the trees, making them extremely tough

to spot. " A number of scat (faeces) samples found on the boxes have

undergone DNA analysis to determine their origin – martens are known

to mark their territories in this way. One batch proved to be from a

stoat, but another is being subjected to further laboratory tests.

Pine martens look similar to a ferret or stoat, but are significantly

larger, and sport a bushy tail.

http://www.gazettelive.co.uk/news/teesside-news/2008/08/20/operation-to-snap-elu\

sive-pine-mart

in-84229-21561713/

 

14) Turkey oaks were introduced to Britain in the 18th century and

have spread across the country, but unlike many invasive species they

are thought to be benefiting the native wildlife. Researchers now

believe that the species of oak, Quercus cerris, fits perfectly into

the native ecosystem because it was a native tree until driven out by

an ice age 120,000 years ago. The tree has been identified as a boon

to garden birds because gallwasps lay eggs on its buds early in the

spring, and these provide an invaluable feast for species such as blue

tits and great tits as they raise their young. Galls form around the

eggs because chemicals on them trick the trees into protecting them,

but, being about the size of sesame seeds, they are easily picked off

by the birds. Tits and other types of bird have been driven to lay

eggs earlier in spring because of warmer conditions brought on by

climate change. Without the gallwasp eggs, few of the young would

survive, because the caterpillars that the birds would usually depend

on have yet to emerge. Dr Stone said after carrying out research with

the Centre for Ecology and Hydrology. " It's quite probable that blue

tits and great tits are quite used to feeding on it because they have

been around for a long time. They were certainly here 150,000 years

ago. " As the Turkey oak reasserts itself in its ancient home, it is

helping to alleviate some of the effects of the very modern problem of

climate change. " The trees reached Britain in 1735, when it was hoped

that they would provide the Royal Navy with building materials, but

the timber proved inferior to English oak. They became popular in

gardens, however. " Everyone who was trendy was having one put in. It

quickly became naturalised, " Dr Stone said. Some people were concerned

that the spread of Turkey oaks would disrupt native oak woodland, but

he was convinced the two species could complement each other. Many

types of gallwasp depend on the two oaks and at least 11 species have

spread naturally to Britain. Animals and plants could take a very long

time to return to their native areas after being driven southwards by

ice ages, Dr Stone said. So a proportion of the species reaching

Britain to-day were doing so as part of a natural cycle, not man-made

global warming.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/environment/article4553496.ece

 

Ireland:

 

15) In his article on reviving Ireland's economic fortunes, Philip

Lynch (Opinion, August 13th) includes forestry as among those

activities which " no longer fit with State ownership " . In reality, due

to its long-term nature, there is no enterprise more appropriate for

State involvement, a fact recognised throughout the developed world.

It was direct State investment from 1904 to 1988 which created the

present Irish State forests and this continues, at one remove, through

State ownership of Coillte. Proper management and protection of

forests, whether public or private, can be assured only through direct

State control. Mr Lynch suggests that " Coillte should be sold back to

the farmers of Ireland as part of a new drive to restart our ailing

agriculture and food sectors " . Which farmers? How would it be paid

for? What would they do with it? For many decades the afforestation of

good land was prohibited by our Government. It is not the quality of

our land that leaves food production in Ireland less competitive in

global markets; it is our climate. And there is little we can do about

that in the short term.

http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/letters/2008/0818/1218868019373.html

 

Bulgaria:

 

16) The State Forestry Agency is helping Kovachki build the

" Iskrovete-Govedartsi-Maliovitsa " ski resort, claims the

environmentalist coalition " Let Nature Survive in Bulgaria " . In 2007

and 2008 the SFA conceded 300 ha of forests for the construction of

ski runs, lifts and hotels in the area of Govedartsi village,

bordering on Rila National Park, a protected area. The resort project

is being developed by the company Nadar 2006, represented by

Kovachki's company LM Impex and Samokov municipality. The altitude of

the resort is 1500 m on average. Swiss banks do not finance resorts at

such low altitudes because of the climatic changes, ecologists inform.

The government conceded this land in violation of article 87 of the EU

Agreement because no tender took place. Moreover, the competitive EU

market mechanisms weren't taken into consideration. The SFA violated

the European directive on strategic ecologic evaluation because no

environmental impact assessment was made. It is unclear whether the

project is compatible with the directives of Natura 2000. The LNSB

coalition has notified the EC of these violations.

http://news.guide-bulgaria.com/SW/Sofia/Samokov/Rila/News.aspx?3793=Government_r\

ants_businessm

an_Hristo_Kovachki_forests_in_Rila_to_build_ski_resort

 

Portugal:

 

17) CASTINCAL — Manuel Coimbra watches in silence, his hands on his

hips, as a lumberjack saws down one of his pine trees to stop a killer

bug which experts say could wipe out large belts of European woodland.

The dense forests that blanket the hillsides of this rural area of

central Portugal are the latest international conquest for the pest

which has caused ecological catastrophes in East Asia. Thousands of

trees here are already dead, according to locals. " It makes me sad, "

Coimbra says, leaning against a jeep on a shady dirt road as experts

bag shavings from the felled tree for testing at a local lab. " Future

generations probably won't know what we're talking about when we tell

them about pine forests. We'd better start taking some photographs to

show them, " said Coimbra, a soft-spoken middle-aged man who owns about

20 acres of local pine forest. His land is on the front line of

Europe's attempt to check the spread of pine wilt disease which is

running out of control in this southwestern corner of the continent

and is a menace for pine forests across the borderless European Union,

from Scandinavia to Italy and Greece. Two species of pine are

susceptible — maritime pine, which accounts for almost one-quarter of

Portugal's forest, and Scots pine, the most widespread pine species in

Europe which is frequently used for Christmas trees. The concerns are

not just environmental. Europe is the world's largest importer and

exporter of forest products which account for more than 3 percent of

global commodity trade with an annual turnover exceeding $200 billion,

according to the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization. The European

Commission last month imposed tight restrictions on the export of

Portuguese pine, which must be disinfected and given a clean bill of

health before leaving the country. The bug, called a nematode, is a

worm invisible to the naked eye which swarms through a pine tree's

innards and kills it within weeks by choking off the flow of sap. It

gets around by hitching a lift in the respiratory system of a flying

beetle which looks a bit like a cockroach. The beetle is believed to

have arrived in Portugal in a ship's cargo from East Asia, where in

the 1970s the nematode almost wiped out Japan's vast pine forests. The

following decade major outbreaks were recorded in the pine forests of

China, Taiwan and Korea.

http://www.southcoasttoday.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080817/NEWS/80817037\

0/-1/rss01

 

18) The world's leading cork maker has launched a campaign against the

increasing use of screw caps and plastic stoppers in wine bottles,

which it says is a threat to Portugal's forests of cork oaks.

Portugal's Amorim Corticeira argues that using only cork stoppers

would ensure the survival of the forests and sustain their unique

ecosystems, home to several endangered animal species such as the

Iberian lynx. Portugal is the world's largest cork producer. Amorim

does not grow the trees itself but buys cork from producers. " The cork

industry in general is under attack, one could say, from alternative

wine bottle closures, " Carlos de Jesus, Amorim marketing director,

told Reuters. " If cork growers lose the cash interest, they will plant

something else, jeopardizing the sustainability chain. " Cork oaks are

not cut down but their bark is harvested every nine years in a tree's

lifespan of more than 150 years. The campaign (www.savemiguel.com>

followed a study by the WWF in June urging Portugal to expand its cork

forests to prevent growing desertification caused by global warming.

De Jesus said the proportion of cork stoppers in wine bottles had

fallen to 70 percent from 90 percent in 12 years.

http://www.reuters.com/article/lifestyleMolt/idUSLC44285220080819

 

Spain:

 

19) As the path wends its way into Sarria it passes through thick

tangled forest, massive trees line the path and the light is dim,

having to pass through many layers of broad leaves. The air is cool

(although admittedly this could be because I arrived very late, well

into evening, but I like to think it was simply the forest) and the

outside world seems far distant, despite being only a few hundred

yards away. These trees are true natives, making up one of the

remaining stands of the forests that once stretched without break

across the Iberian peninsula. Whilst much of Spain is now completely

cleared of trees, Galicia has a fair amount of forest, but these are

made up of mainly eucalyptus and pine, with little space for the slow

growing indigenous species. As far as I know there are plans to try

and change the balance somewhat and plant more of the native trees

here in the future. I hope so, I'm sure that as I walked through that

ancient forest I heard birdsong I hadn't heard anywhere else in these

lands. http://walkacrossspain.blogspot.com/2008/08/ancient-forests.html

 

Ghana:

 

20) Delegations from the world over will meet on 21-27th August in

Accra, Ghana for the next round of UN climate talks, with a view to

chalk out ways and means to combat global warming. The talks will lay

emphasis on Reducing Emissions from Deforestation in Developing

Countries or REDD. This might seem like a step in the right direction,

but green groups, by voicing their opposition against REDD have

highlighted the hazards of including forests in the carbon market.

Campaigners have warned that unless indigenous groups are part of the

climate negotiations, efforts to slow down deforestation could lead to

a " land grab " . Nikki Reisch of Rainforest Foundation UK asserts that

" indigenous people that have lived in and depended on the forests are

best placed to protect them " . Friends of the Earth International

criticized the UN for concentrating on financial concerns when " land

rights must be centre stage " . Though cognizant of the fact that

deforestation is responsible for almost 20% of the global emissions,

campaigners believe that preserving forests through carbon trading

will take away focus from the real culprit -our ever growing " needs "

and also give the developed nations an excuse to continue emitting

nasty amounts of greenhouse gases.

http://www.carbonoffsetsdaily.com/carbonmarketnews/environmental-groups-against-\

including-fore

sts-in-carbon-markets-1073.htm

 

Uganda:

 

21) The look on Twinomuhangi's face left no doubt about his

determination to nurture forests and fight encroachment until his last

breath. The youthful forester's undisputed resolve has earned him not

only respect from his superiors, but also the hearts of the local

people. " We were put as stewards and the work we are doing is not

ours, " he says. " It is important to protect the forest so that the

children who are not yet born can benefit from them. " He was in a

mournful mood last week as he took NFA's trustees around forests that

had more tree stumps than trees, a testimony to the many years of

wanton destruction. " This, " Twinomuhangi says, " had been left by

mindless encroachers and illegal loggers. " The bare patches staring at

the sky have now become a recipe for the erosive rains that drag away

soil and deposit it in the nearby Lake Victoria. " It is difficult to

imagine that the people who have cut down this forest like this expect

to get rain, " says Twinomuhangi. Twinomuhangi says this set-back has

come as a result of shortage of manpower. " Where five patrol officers

are needed to watch over illegal activities, you find only one. " He

was speaking to Baguma Isoke, the chairperson of NFA and other

trustees that were on a mission to find out the challenges facing the

conservation body. Their three-day tour started in Mukono and later

covered parts of Mpigi, Wakiso, Masaka, Rakai, Sembabule and Lyantonde

districts. In agreement with Twinomuhangi was Jane Niwaninda, the

sector manager in Rakai, who has also been engaged in running battles

since the creation of NFA four years ago. " We lack manpower, but the

community in some areas is on our side, " she says. " We patrol the

forest together and plant trees to help the forest recover. "

http://allafrica.com/stories/200808190257.html

 

Malawi:

 

22) Government, through the Ministry of Industry and Trade, has

imposed a ban on export of hardwood and its products with immediate

effect. The development follows rampant deforestation that has

threatened the future of natural trees mostly used in the carving of

curios. But the move has not gone down well with curio traders who

fear the ban would negatively affect their business, which is mostly

export oriented. However, in an interview on Monday, Principal

Secretary of Industry and Trade Nebert Nyirenda, said the decision was

made to preserve forests and avoid further environmental degradation.

" The fact of the matter is that hardwood trees have been there for

along time some of them over hundreds of years and to destroy

something like this for money is illogical so the ban still stands, "

said Nyirenda. But a curio vendor in Blantyre who identified himself

as Adak Yusuf said government is not being considerate by banning the

exports since it would slash their income earning base. " You see most

of our customers are foreign tourists and by coming up with this ban

government is cutting us out from that market. The reality of the

matter is that it is very rare for our citizens to buy curios from us

and our business will suffer, " said Yusuf. But Nyirenda said it was

high time people dealing in trade that hurt the environment diversify

to other sectors like agriculture that are equally profitable. " There

are several ways that curio traders could do since the ban is

affecting hardwood they could be seasoning soft wood so that the

quality matches hardwood. On the other hand they must explore farming

cash crops because currently crops like beans, maize and rice are

attracting huge returns locally and internationally, " said Nyirenda.

He added that government would prosecute those merchants found

exporting the banned product.

http://www.dailytimes.bppmw.com/article.asp?ArticleID=10605

 

Congo:

 

23) Reuters reported last week that a Congolese-government funded

study recommends that ¾ of logging contracts should be ended

immediately for not meeting required standards. The study, which

looked at 156 logging deals, was conducted in order to recoup millions

of dollars in tax money and to put an end to a " business ripe with

corruption. " In 2002, the Congo put a 5-year halt on any new logging

contracts but that has been largely ignored as new contracts are still

being approved. Only 29 of the 156 contracts currently meet logging

standards, and the commission's preliminary findings recommend that 16

current contracts be terminated. Portugese owned Sodefor, German-owned

Siforco and Safbois all have multiple contracts on the recommended

list for termination, in total accounting for " 66% of all timber

exported from Congo. " Congo has the second largest tropical forest in

the world, accounting for a quarter of the world's tropical forests,

and they are currently being chopped down at a rate of 800,000

hectares a year. The study was backed by the World Bank and findings

from the report will be published mid-September. Their recommendations

are non-binding and any actions to be taken will be decided once the

final report is published.

http://www.treehugger.com2008/08/congolese-logging-not-protecting-forests\

..php

 

Rwanda:

 

24) The Secretary General of the Rwanda Red Cross Society (RRCS),

Appolinaire Karamaga, yesterday revealed that they intend to plant

over 600,000 trees by the end of 2008. Karamaga was addressing Red

Cross field and headquarter workers, and the organization's partners

in a meeting on climate change at the Red Cross Headquarters in

Kacyiru, Gasabo District. According to Karamaga, all local Red Cross

branches at district level have prepared nursery beds, with an average

of 20, 000 plants. Karamaga pointed out that one of the recommended

measures to preserve the world's climate is tree planting. He added

that human activities cause climate change, citing examples of

deforestation and over grazing. " With our network of volunteers and

the great commitment of the Red Cross movement to cope with this

crisis, we think we can do more. But, we consider that adaptation is

critical in responding to the impacts of climate change and offers

opportunities to support development, " Karamaga said. He continued to

say that a big part of the country in the past years was hit by a long

drought which mostly affected poor communities who depend solely on

agriculture. Karamaga added that there is need to explore all areas

and opportunities to enhance actions to promote food security, good

health and prevent other disasters like floods and landslides.The of Environmental Education and the Focal Point of the United

Nation Convention on Climate Change in Rwanda, Sebastian Dusabeyezu,

said that Global warming with its associated challenges is becoming

more apparent with the threat of reducing the potential of natural

resources to support livelihoods and development in general. He added

that adaptation to climate change in Rwanda is vital and has been

highlighted by its initial communication report, National Adaptation

Programmes of Action – NAPA and Economic Development and Poverty

Reduction Strategy (EDPRS). He recommended tree planting and

exploiting solar, energy efficient cooking stoves, peat and

hydropower, climate change awareness in schools, government & local

institutions. http://www.newtimes.co.rw/index.php?issue=13627 & article=8816

 

Nigeria:

 

25) A hydro-geologist and Acting Vice Chancellor, Nnamdi Azikiwe

University (NAU), Awka, Professor Boniface Egboka, has said if the

perennial devastation of the Anambra environment by flood is not

properly checked, the state may be obliterated from the map of Nigeria

in the next 20 years. Egboka said the signs are already manifest,

adding that ecological problems in the state are both manmade and

natural. He said human activities such as land excavation,

deforestation, and urbanisation over the years had destroyed the

environment, while natural factors like poor soil geology, which makes

it porous and heavy, had rendered an otherwise rainforest zone of the

South-East into a Guinea Savannah, with far greater effects on

Anambra, whose land area of over 70per cent had been devastated by

flood and gullies. He also said high population density of the entire

South-east, loss of human activities and effects of the civil war in

the zone which witnessed heavy bombardment, destabilised the

environment and caused a lot of problem. Egboka said agricultural

areas at Agulu in Anaocha Council area, Oneh and Ogboji and Orumba

South, as well as the Omambala communities in Anambra east and west

council areas are destroyed with most of the land surface wasted away,

while increasing indices of diseases, poverty, hunger and depression

linger. He said there was need for both the Federal Government and

international agencies to intervene and save the state and the entire

South-east from being washed away, adding that government should

hearken to the plea by South-east governors who visited him recently,

and give attention to the erosion problem in the zone.

http://www.thisdayonline.com/nview.php?id=120185

 

Central Africa:

 

26) This forest is for WWF one of the most important places on earth.

It is at the cutting edge of conservation for the organisation. Here

we are trying to conserve forest on a very large scale, working at the

highest levels with heads of states and with foreign governments and

at the same time working with local communities to try and find

solutions which can sustain conservation in the long term. It is a

flagship programme for our organisation. So it is important for me to

have time to see what is being done and to share with some of our most

important partners. What is your impression about the Jengi Programme?

This is a place with stunning resources; the only place where you can

see lowland gorillas and forest elephants. But more broadly a real

spectacular forest from a biodiversity perspective. It is a place for

people who want to be part of finding solutions, who want to be part

of conservation and a place of great challenges. This is a hard place

to find good solutions. We have seen very exciting work from some of

our colleagues in Central Africa Republic and here in Cameroon. We

have seen some of what they are up against and the challenges they

face. It has been for me a very inspiring trip. You were in a logging

company (Group SEFAC) that recently received FSC Certification. Do you

think, from what you saw and heard, it was worthwhile for WWF to

accompany this company through the certification process? I think FSC

Certification is one of the most important strategies we have

developed over the last 15 years because, absolutely, we have to find

ways to conserve the forest and at the same time meet the economic and

social needs of surrounding communities. And certified forestry is a

proven strategy for doing that. It is very exciting to see that

strategy work here in Central Africa. In this specific case we were

able to talk with the management and see sustainable forest management

in operation. For me it was a great visit.

http://www.postnewsline.com/2008/08/conservation-ca.html

 

World-wide:

 

27) To mark the UN Day for Indigenous Peoples on 9 August, Survival

International today named its 'unholy trinity' – the three worst

companies abusing tribal peoples' rights. They are: 1) VEDANTA. This

FTSE-100 company is determined to construct a bauxite mine on the

sacred hills of the Dongria Kondh tribe in Orissa, India. It has

already built a $1 billion aluminium refinery at the foot of the

hills. The Dongria Kondh, one of India's most isolated tribes, are

resolutely opposed to the mine, which will destroy them as a people.

2)PERENCO. A Franco-British oil company, Perenco is pushing ahead with

drilling in the nothern Peruvian Amazon, despite being warned that its

operations risk the lives ofuncontacted Indian groups. The company's

plans have attracted two lawsuits from Peru's Amazon Indians, but it

has vowed to carry on. There have already been reports of contact

between the oil workers and the isolated Indians. 3) SAMLING. Active

in Sarawak, Malaysia, for four decades, Samling has been responsible

for logging vast areas of rainforest, including the ancestral lands of

the nomadic Penan tribe. The Penan have repeatedly blockaded logging

roads in an attempt to halt the devastation of their forest, but much

of it has now been destroyed. Many Penan have been arrested, and James

Ho, Samling's Chief Operating Officer, has said, 'The Penan have no

rights to the forest.'

http://whatrainforest.wordpress.com/2008/08/12/sarawak-boleh-samling-earns-inter\

national-recog

nition/

 

28) As inspiring as " An Inconvenient Truth " was frightening, Cathy

Henkel's energetic documentary, " The Burning Season, " tackles one

aspect of global warming and introduces people trying to make a

difference. Heady facts about emission trading schemes threaten to

overwhelm the viewer, but pic also packs plenty of genuine emotion,

and the presence of altruistic Australian entrepreneur Dorjee Sun in

the financial corridors of power gives it the same giddy atmosphere

that made " Startup.com " so exhilarating. A 42-minute version aired on

PBS in July; other pubcasters should. Feature-length version shown at

Brisbane should be a hot ticket on the fest circuit. Henkel starts in

the jungles of Borneo, where orangutans are dying or being displaced

thanks to deforestation, which covers the region in smoke and creates

carbon emissions. Danish conservationist Lone Droscher-Nielsen,

dedicated to saving the simians, nurses back to health the few apes

she can rescue from " the burning season. " Images of orangutans

wandering in devastated forests are heartbreaking. Repping

deforestation's other side, pic's second thread focuses on the plight

of Indonesian villager Achmadi, one of thousands who strip palm trees

for palm oil (frequently marketed as vegetable oil) for international

cosmetics and confectionery corporations. His motivation is simple

survival — and the rare privilege of sending his daughter to school.

http://redapes.org/news-updates/must-see-new-film-the-burning-season/

 

29) The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change sets the rules by

which countries report their Greenhouse Gas Emissions. The IPCC is

empowered to make these rules according to the United Nations

Framework Convention on Climate Change. Nearly every country,

including the United States, is a signatory. With all that in mind,

let's focus on the rules around emissions from harvesting forests and

the storage of carbon in forest products. The rules for measuring

carbon stored in ecosystems is actually pretty straightforward: the

balance of carbon stored there year after year is measured (estimated)

based on estimates for which the IPCC provides methodologies. Change

in the carbon stored are reported either as an emission (the amount of

carbon went down) or a removal (the amount of carbon went up). It is

called a removal because the ecosystem removes carbon from the

atmosphere. At present, the U.S. is estimated to be carbon positive,

as trees grow more than they are cut down or are otherwise lost. This

is the equation given in the IPCC's Good Practice Guidance for

Land-Use, Land-Use Change and Forestry for national greenhouse gas

reporting of the carbon balance in forests: The equation means that

the change in forest carbon is equal to the change in living biomass

plus the change in dead organic matter plus the change in soils. There

are also rules for accounting for harvests of forest products. This is

the most significant issue with regard to the paper industry, since it

lays out the rules by which the most important input into the industry

is accounted for in terms of carbon emissions. Let's focus on the Good

Practice Guidance equation 3.2.7 " Annual Carbon Loss Due to Commercial

Fellings. " The loss due to logging (a.k.a. harvest) is calculated as:

[losses from commercial fellings] = [the volume of wood extracted] x

[wood density] x [biomass extraction factor] x [carbon left to decay]

x [carbon content of the wood harvested] For our purposes, we need to

understand that the wood harvested is an emission of carbon and we

also need to include the wood that is left in the forest that will

decay and that must be accounted for as well. Thus, when accounting

for inputs into products or the use of biomass for energy, harvested

wood must be counted as an emission. There really is no ambiguity

around this fact. Those who state 'biomass is carbon neutral' (a

normative statement, not a scientific one) rely on statements like

this one in the 1996 Revised Guidelines for national greenhouse gas

reporting: " Biomass fuels are included in the national energy and CO2

emissions accounts for information only. Within the energy module

biomass consumption is assumed to equal its regrowth. "

http://thepaperplanet.blogspot.com/2008/08/rules-for-carbon-accounting-of.html

 

30) A race to grab land in developing countries and exploit food

supply fears and payments to conserve forests could spark conflicts in

areas of land disputes, development and civil rights groups

say.Investors say higher land valuations are just what's needed to

settle claims which may have festered since colonial days. But much

marginal and forested land is common property, which in the past has

given poor local communities little benefit from logging, mining and

oil concessions. " No-man's land and hinterland is suddenly valuable, "

said Andy White, coordinator for the Washington-based Rights and

Resources Initiative, a development NGO. " Communities had been told

the land was theirs. Now it's contested, " he said, explaining that a

community in Liberia had told him that in one week they had separate

visits from a mining company, a logging company and a biofuel company.

" They were told by the government -- 'go out and prospect'. "

Spiralling commodity prices have driven speculative interest in farms

and forests in emerging markets where productive land can cost one

10th of the price in industrialised countries. " There are still very

good prospects, " said George Lee, manager of hedge fund firm

Eclectica's agriculture fund, which invests in companies which buy

land, comparing grazing land prices in Uruguay at $3,000 per hectare

with $20,000 in Britain. Benchmark wheat prices have dipped by a third

since a peak last September but remain 50 percent above a 2007 low.

Land and food prices are expected to remain high as a growing, richer

world demands more land for settlement and food, while climate change

threatens more droughts. Steps to fight climate change and secure

energy supplies are partly to blame for stoking land prices, by

fuelling interest in alternative energy including biofuels produced

from food crops such as palm oil, soy, sugar and grains.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/business/feedarticle/7724979

 

31) Compared to prehistoric times, the level of oxygen in the earth's

atmosphere has fallen by over a third and in polluted cities the

decline could be more than 50 percent. This change in the makeup of

the air we breathe has potentially serious implications for our

health. Indeed, it could ultimately threaten the survival of human

life on earth, says Roddy Newman, who is drafting a new book, The

Oxygen Crisis. So, what's the evidence? About 10,000 years ago, the

planet's forest cover was at least twice what it is today, which means

forests are now emitting only half the amount of oxygen. And

desertification and deforestation are rapidly accelerating this

long-term loss of oxygen sources. The story at sea is much the same.

NASA reports that in the north Pacific Ocean oxygen-producing

phytoplankton concentrations are 30 percent lower today, compared to

even the 1980s. This is a huge drop in just three decades. Moreover,

the UN Environment Program said in 2004 that there were nearly 150

" dead zones " in the world's oceans where discharged sewage and

industrial waste, farm fertilizer run-off and other pollutants have

reduced oxygen levels to such an extent that most or all sea creatures

can no longer live there. Professor Ian Plimer of Adelaide University

and Professor Jon Harrison of the University of Arizona accept that

oxygen levels in the atmosphere in prehistoric times averaged 35

percent compared to only 21 percent today. The levels are even lower

in densely populated, polluted city centers and industrial complexes,

perhaps only 15 percent or lower. Much of this recent, accelerated

change is down to human activity, notably the industrial revolution

and the burning of fossil fuels. Which means we are slowing down one

process, oxygen generation, and speeding up another, carbon dioxide

production. Very interesting. But does this decline in oxygen matter?

Are there any practical consequences that we ought to be concerned

about? What is the effect of lower oxygen levels on the human body?

Surprisingly, no significant research has been done, perhaps on the

following presumption: the decline in oxygen levels has taken place

over millions of years of our planet's existence. Surely, this mostly

gradual decline has allowed the human body to evolve and adapt to

lower concentrations of oxygen? Maybe, maybe not.

http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/world/2008-08/15/content_6937226.htm

 

32) Whilst I am appreciative of WWF's reply, it does nothing to

reassure me they will save any orangutans. Why? Because some 25 years

ago they also had 'big' plans to " Save the Tiger " . What happened? I'm

guessing WWF must have spent tens of millions of pounds of donors

money on this project. I've been unable to find out what the tiger

population was back in about 1975, but the Indian tiger is now down to

the about last 1500. I think we can safely say that during WWF's

multi-million pound " Save the Tiger " campaign at least 10,000 tigers

have been killed, maybe 20,000 or more. Numerically speaking WWF has

not saved a single tiger; worse though, thousands were killed during

this high profile WWF fundraising campaign - to save tigers. So, where

did all the public money go? Now we have WWF with another big, 'sexy',

high profile income generating species, and really big plans to save

them. Hmmnn. I'm not saying WWF won't try. What I am saying is, based

on their past and my own impression of WWF on the ground in Indonesian

Borneo, I have zero faith in their ability to save any orangutans.

About 2500-3000 orangutans have been killed annually for the past 25

years. Let's see if WWF can get this figure down shall we? As you will

see below, the amount of money WWF has at its disposal is enormous. It

is what WWF does with the money that concerns me. Keep in mind a great

many people in Borneo would consider a wage of £1000 a year to be a

fantastic amount. Now look at how much money WWF has - available for

orangutan conservation - and this is ONLY the UK office. Put another

way; the Centre for Orangutan Protection (COP) in the past couple of

months has saved seven orangutans at a total cost of perhaps £2000.

COP is also out there building conservation camps, investigating and

exposing palm oil companies, etc. etc. on an annual budget for 10

people that is smaller than any single project WWF has listed below.

Just look at the photos on this Blog, then look at WWF's fancy web

site and judge for yourself, who you think is doing a much better job

for orangutans.

http://naturealert.blogspot.com/2008/08/wwfs-reply.html

 

 

33) They are our elders and help to mark our seasons; skeletal in the

winter, limey in the spring, deep-green in summer and crimson in

autumn. Not every place on the planet has the climate conducive to

tree growth, and those that can support a healthy tree population

should be encouraged to do so, especially in this age of potential

climate change. Certainly, from a practical or utilitarian

perspective, we should remember our trees when we sit on our favourite

chair, jot a phone number on a scrap of paper or huddle inside our

homes by the fire, burning bright and warm.

http://news.scotsman.com/scotland/We-must-strive-to-protect.4397355.jp

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