CHINA: Dam Casts Long Shadow Over Idyllic Valley

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Monday, November 03, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Antoaneta Bezlova

LIJIANG, Nov 3 (IPS) – The town at Tiger Leaping Gorge is a ghost town. Clusters of new apartments in mock-Tibetan style with whitewashed walls and ornate flat roofs sit all empty, with gaping windows. The newly widened streets are free of traffic and the surrounding beauty of nature makes for an eerie contrast to the emptiness of the place.

Nestled in the folds of the snow-peaked mountains of Shangri-la and perched over the rushing waters of Jinsha River, the place is so picturesque that it is no surprise that it was picked as the perfect retirement spot for local government officials.

They too wanted to retreat from the world in the paradise on Earth that English writer James Hilton made famous in his 1933 fantasy novel ”Lost Horizon”.

”They (the officials) all bought properties here,” says Xiao Luo, a local tour guide from the Naxi minority. ”These buildings are all new and were all built for retired cadres. But no one dares yet to come and live here. If the dam gets built this whole area will be flooded.”
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PERU: Free Trade Opens Environmental Window

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Saturday, November 01, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Milagros Salazar* – Tierramérica

LIMA, Nov 1 (IPS) – Legislative decree 1090, which modifies Peru’s forest policy, is worrying U.S. trade authorities because it contravenes environmental clauses of the Free Trade Agreement (FTA) that is to enter force between the two countries in January 2009.

The decree, which in June amended the Forestry and Wildlife Act, leaves 45 million hectares — or 60 percent of Peru’s jungles — out of the Forestry Heritage protection system — a step that runs counter to the FTA forestry annex.

That was one of the 10 observations made by the Office of the U.S Trade Representative, Susan Schwab, in a meeting with delegates of the Peruvian government earlier this month in Washington, according to Sandro Chávez, president of the non-governmental Ecological Forum (Foro Ecológico).
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ECONOMY-MAURITIUS: Textile Manufacturing Goes Green and Clean

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Saturday, November 01, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Nasseem Ackbarally

PORT LOUIS, Nov 1 (IPS) – ‘‘The cost of production is high in Mauritius as we are far away from our main markets. Our island is so small that at times our clients do forget us. We no longer benefit from any trade preferences. We don’t have any natural resources but we have plenty of sunshine and wind and we have decided to use these resources.”

These are the thoughts that Kendall Tang, director of Richfield Tang Knits Ltd, a factory at La Tour Koenig south of the capital, shared with European buyers recently.

They visited his factory before attending the International Textile Manufacturers Federation’s (ITMF) conference on the theme of a greener and a more sustainable textile industry last month.

Richfield Tang Knits Ltd, or RT Knits as it is known, has devised a new strategy based on green production to reduce its costs of production and to improve its work environment. The company is betting on the availability of the sunshine and the stable direction of the wind 10 out of 12 months yearly.
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BIODIVERSITY: Unraveling the Mysteries of Salmon Migration

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Friday, October 31, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Stephen Leahy

UXBRIDGE, Canada, Oct 31 (IPS) – Tiny juvenile salmon have been electronically tracked for the first time from their natal rivers in the Rocky Mountains 2,500 kilometres north to Alaska.

”We’re turning the lights on in the oceans,” enthused Jim Bolger, a marine biologist at the Vancouver Aquarium.

”It’s very exciting, with this new technology scientists can finally see how changes in the oceans are affecting fish and other species,” Bolger told IPS.

The new technology is a series of electronic acoustic receivers planted along the ocean bottom stretching 1,750 kilometres from Oregon through British Columbia and north to the Alaskan panhandle. Fish and other species have transmitters implanted and the receivers pick up their individual signals as they pass.

The transmitters or tags are now as small as an almond and can be surgically implanted in juvenile salmon less than 14 centimetres in length. As they approach, the receivers log the tag’s unique serial number, the date and time. Movement patterns of individual animals, including direction and speed, can be reconstructed using the time of detection at different receivers and other listening curtains.

”Several mysteries of fish migration and survival may soon start to unravel,” said Bolger, the executive director of what is called the Pacific Ocean Shelf Tracking (POST) Project, a part of the international Census of Marine Life

One of those mysteries is where salmon go after they leave the rivers where they are born.

To try and answer that question, researchers implanted tags in 1,000 juvenile Chinook salmon in 2006 and followed their journeys in the Columbia and Fraser Rivers using the POST receivers. Among the many studied, two tagged juveniles survived a 2,500-km trip that took more than three months — from the upper reaches of the Snake River (a tributary of the Columbia River) in Idaho, out to sea then north along the continental shelf to Alaska according to a study published this week in the journal Public Library of Science Biology,

Most surprising of all, said Bolger, was that salmon from the undammed, free-flowing Fraser River in Canada suffered the same high levels of mortality as those battling their way through the eight dams of the Columbia River system. In fact, more survived in the Columbia once distance or travel time was taken into account — and survival was greater during migration within the hydropower system than below the dammed section.

”It raises the question of unknown factors in the Fraser system that may be having an impact on the juveniles,” said Bolger, one of the co-authors of the study.

Results of previous studies on white sturgeon also surprised researchers when they learned that the big, bottom-feeding fish migrated from the Sacramento River in California to the Fraser nearly 1,000 kms north in Canada.

”We thought the Fraser sturgeon were local and that it was okay to fish them,” Bolger said. In the U.S., they are carefully regulated but no one knew they migrated into Canada.

”Wherever future research leads on those questions, the electronic and acoustic technology has demonstrated itself as a useful tool for obtaining unique scientific data of importance in a number of public policy arenas,” said David Welch of Kintama Research, Nanaimo, British Columbia who led the salmon research effort.

Similar electronic listening curtains will have been strung together along the northeast coast by the end of this year. Two others being considered are between Florida and Cuba and another between Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula and Cuba. The hope is to cover much of the world’s continental shelf one day, said Jesse Ausubel of Rockefeller University, who is a member of POST’s management board.

”We have a working technology, and it’s affordable. The hope is to have a monitoring system around the world,” Ausubel told IPS.

This type of tracking network can reveal the mysteries about where fish go and how many survive in the oceans, and can help fisheries management and conservation efforts. There are enormous controversies along the coastal zones of Africa and other places about which country ”owns” certain fish stocks, he said.

”Knowing where fish go is a key question that needs to be answered,” Ausubel said.

And knowing where species migrate, feed and breed is vital for conservation and management efforts. Within the next decade Ausubel hopes there will be an Ocean Tracking Network that covers continental shelves as well as the open ocean.

A different tracking device is needed for fish like sharks that traverse entire oceans. The open ocean tag is a like a business card — it not only identifies the specific fish, it records all sorts of data about where it has been and data from any other tagged fish that were nearby. That way when any of the fish are close enough to a floating receiver, all this information will be downloaded. For species that break the surface, the data will be transferred via satellite.

The first of these new tags will be implanted in salmon sharks near Hawaii in 2009. If all goes well, scientists will be able to determine their migration route to the Gulf of Alaska. And with salmon also tagged, there might be the first real-time study of the predator-prey interactions, Ausubel said.

”These results from North America have global implications and will be of interest in Chile, Russia, Japan, India, Ireland — indeed every nation where fish migrate between fresh and salt water,” concluded Victor Gallardo of Chile, the Census of Marine Life’s vice chair.

BURMA: China’s Thirst for Oil Ignores Environment, Rights

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Friday, October 31, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

By Marwaan Macan-Markar

BANGKOK, Oct 31 (IPS) – The largest island off Burma’s west coast is emerging as another frontier for China’s expanding plans to extract the rich oil and gas reserves of military-ruled Burma.

Initial explorations by a consortium, led by China National Offshore Oil Company (CNOOC), has left a deep scar on Ramree Island, which is twice the size of Singapore and home to about 400,000 people. ‘’They have destroyed rice fields and plantations when conducting the seismic surveys and mining the island in search of oil,’’ says Jockai Khaing, director of Arakan Oil Watch (AOW), an environmental group made up of Burmese living in exile.

‘’The local communities have been directly and indirectly affected,’’ he Said during an IPS interview. ‘’Hundreds of people have been forced to relocate as a result of the drilling conducted near their communities. The locals hate the Chinese; their world has become crazy after the Chinese arrived.’’
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ARGENTINA: Caution and Enthusiasm for Fish Farming

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Saturday, October 25, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Marcela Valente* – Tierramérica

BUENOS AIRES, Oct 25 (IPS) – Fish farming is expanding in Latin America, fuelled by the demands of a global market that is facing the stagnation of commercial fishing. But some people are warning about the limits of industrial production of fish and the environmental and social risks.

According to the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO), 45 percent of the fish consumed in the world comes from fish farms. Today that means 48 million tonnes, but by 2030 that volume would have to be doubled because of the decline in commercial fishing and the increasing demands of a growing population.

In Mexico, aquaculture dates back to the pre-Hispanic era. Historians say that several species were raised in ponds and that the Maya Indians controlled fish reproduction in natural pools known as ”cenotes”.
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PHILIPPINES: ‘Women Take the Brunt of Climate Change’

Prime Sarmiento

MANILA, Oct 24 (IPS) – Filpinia farmer Trinidad Domingo views the coming rice harvest season with trepidation. A typhoon destroyed much of her crop and Domingo estimates that her two-hectare plot will produce less than the usual 200 sacks of rice.

Typhoons are a part of life for most Filipino farmers but they know how to minimise losses brought on by heavy rains. Domingo starts tilling rice as early as June and July — the start of the wet season. By planting early, she can avoid most rain damage.

But this year, Domingo could only start planting in August as the wet season started late.

”This is really a problem for me as I invested a lot of money, about PhP 60,000 (roughly 1,250 US dollars), for this cropping season. I may not be able to repay my loan and my family may really need to tighten belts,” she said. Domingo heads an extended family that includes siblings and numerous nephews.
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KENYA: Biofuels Boom and Bust

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Friday, October 24, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

John David Bwakali

NAIROBI, Oct 24 (IPS) – The Kenyan government has hailed bio-diesel as an innovation that combines green politics with poverty reduction. But recent drops in biofuel prices have caused concern about the sustainability of alternative fuel production.

Rural farmers who have invested all their savings into growing oil seeds now fear they have opted for the wrong venture.

Over the last few years, the Kenyan government, NGOs and industry have pushed the production of bio-diesel — which is environmentally sustainable because it emits fewer toxic air pollutants and greenhouse gasses than petroleum-based fuels — and many small-scale farmers have placed their hopes into oil seeds as a new avenue to earn money. Initially, biofuel projects seemed to be a success, with farmers more than doubling their usual income.

In Ngurumani, a small town in Kenya’s Rift Valley, for example, farmers started to sell the seeds of the jatropha tree for bio-diesel production, which had an immediate, positive impact on reducing poverty and hunger in the region. Farmers who previously used to plant food crops for household consumption only, started selling seeds for as much as $10 per kilo.

Esther Siteyia, a 28-year-old Maasai from Ngurumani, told IPS she bought and sold over five tonnes of the seeds during the last twelve months. ”For the first ten months that I sold Jatropha seeds, my income tripled. I would buy seeds from farmers and sell them to the highest bidder at a handsome profit,” she says. Small-scale farmers who sold the seeds to her also made good profits, increasing their income to more than $1 a day.

Originally from Central America, the drought-resistant jatropha tree has been growing in Ngurumani for decades. Yet, until recently, the Maasai, who traditionally use jatropha trees for fencing of homesteads, marking graves or treating cuts, were unaware that the black seeds of the trees were in fact valuable sources of biofuel.

In another town in Central Kenya, Naromoru, a collaboration between NGO Help Self Help, the Jomo Kenyatta University of Agriculture and Technology in Nairobi and Dutch bio-diesel manufacturer Solarix launched Kenya Eco-Energy, a project that encourages rural farmers to use two other types of seeds, castor and croton, for environmentally friendly bio-diesel production.

Small-scale farmers earned $0.15 per kilogramme of castor or croton seeds. ”Every day, I now make about 200 shillings ($2.5) from the seeds,’ says Ann Njeri, a housewife and mother of three who lives on a small farm outside Naromoru.

Prices dropped

However, the farmers’ luck ran out in April when biofuel prices suddenly plummeted from an average of $10 per kilo to less than $0.5 per kilo. Biofuel research companies, producers and NGOs supporting the production of environmentally friendly diesel had created an artificially high demand for the seeds, which resulted a high pricing structure that could not be maintained in an open market in the long-term.

In addition, the development of regulatory policy frameworks and local infrastructure needed to manufacture bio-diesel took longer than expected. As a result, Kenya has only few biofuel processing plants that struggle to keep up production with seed supply, and many rural farmers cannot afford the costs of transporting their seeds to the nearest factory.

Siteyia’s storeroom in Ngurumani, for example, is now filled to the brim with Jatropha, but she has no buyers for her seeds. The Kenya Eco-Energy project, to which she initially sold the seeds, has run out of capacity, and the nearest oil seed processing plant in Central Kenya is more than 200 kilometres from her village, too far for her to transport the seeds herself.

Although the production of biofuels creates environmental sustainability, farmers will not be able to continue investing in them if they don’t have a market to sell their produce. Numerous Kenyan farmers who have put their little savings into the planting of oil seed producing trees have now lost their initial investments.

Linet Kanini, a small-scale farmer from Tala in eastern Kenya, has found herself to be financially worse off now than before investing into oil seeds. More than a year after planting Jatropha on her five-acre farm, she harvested a few kilos of seeds — far less than she expected — and has no customers. She says she regrets deciding to plant the oil crop: ”Although I have harvested a few kilos, I have nowhere to sell them.”
Lack of infrastructure

Yet, energy experts remain optimistic, predicting the demand for biofuels to increase in the near future. According to the International Energy Outlook of 2007, global oil consumption is projected to increase by about 36% by 2030. In Africa, oil consumption is projected to double in that time.

Already, global bio-diesel production is on the increase, growing from one billion litres in 2000 to six billion litres in 2006. If this trend continues, oil seed farmers may reap substantial profits within the next few years.

Farmers now set their hopes into the Kenyan energy ministry that promised to support bio-diesel production as a poverty reduction strategy. It recently passed policies to encourage the building of bio-diesel refineries in rural areas and said it expects the country’s bio-diesel industry to increase household income levels by 30% by 2012.

John Kioli, director of Nairobi-based NGO Green Africa Foundation, agrees that more money needs to be invested into small-scale biofuel production to turn around the downward trend in pricing. ”For profitable and sustainable markets to be realised, local communities need their own processing plants that absorb locally available seeds. The guiding principle should be to use local raw material for local production and for local consumption,” he explained.

Biodiesel is not only supported by governments for poverty alleviation and environmental reasons, it is also cheaper than regular diesel.

At a filling station in Naromoru, a long line of motorists cue to fill their vehicles with bio-diesel. At $1.1 per litre, bio-diesel is ten cents cheaper than ordinary petrol, a price difference that accumulates to substantial savings for drivers.

”Every day, I cover 300 kilometres with my public minibus. I am now saving about $90 every month because of using bio-diesel,” minibus driver Maina Kamau told IPS.

OIL SANDS-PART 3: Biggest Customer Has Second Thoughts

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Monday, October 20, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Chris Arsenault*

FT. MCMURRAY, Oct 20 (IPS) – As Canada’s tar sands extraction expands full steam ahead, a perfect storm of internal and external opposition could derail some of the voracious growth at the world’s largest energy project.

Together, skyrocketing construction costs, falling crude prices, increasingly vocal opposition from some native groups, and a little known section of the 2007 U.S. Energy Independence and Security Act all threaten growth projections in northern Alberta.

”If I was an investor, I wouldn’t want to take the risk of putting money into the tar sands right now,” said Liz Barratt-Brown, a senior attorney at the Natural Resources Defence Council, an NGO leading U.S. lobbying efforts against Canada’s heavy oil industry.

Canada is the largest foreign exporter of oil to the United States, with Alberta’s tar sands sending roughly 500,000 barrels to the U.S. every day. Losing access to the U.S. market would significantly affect expansion plans.
[Read more...]

OIL SANDS-PART 2: ”Where I Come From Is Ground Zero”

Global Geopolitics Net Sites / IPS
Friday, October 17, 2008

All rights reserved, IPS – Inter Press Service, 2008.

Chris Arsenault*

FT. MCMURRAY, Oct 17 (IPS) – The wheels of the Caterpillar 797B, the world’s largest truck, are always going round and round at Shell Canada’s Albian Sands mine.

The massive dump trucks, with wheels standing twice the size of a person and tires costing some 40,000 dollars apiece, carry tar sand 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

”There isn’t a lot of work in Newfoundland [a traditionally poor province on Canada's Atlantic coast], so you can do pretty well out here,” Brian Paley, a mechanic who fixes and inspects the three-storey trucks, told IPS.

Paley says he enjoys the work; he earns a six-figure salary and the rugged northern Alberta landscape allows him to snowmobile in the winter and camp during the summer.

However, some natives living downstream from the operation say the tar sands are destroying ecosystems that give people like Brian Paley so much pleasure.

”We’ve lost 108 people since 1990, the elders say they buried one person per year in the old days,” said Michael Mercredi, a member Athabasca Chipewyan/Dene First Nation from Fort Chipewayn, a community of some 1,200 aboriginals located downstream from the tar sands. Many community members died of rare cancers they blame on the tar sands.

Like many young people from Ft. Chipewayn, Mercredi knows the tar sands well; he spent four years making big money driving trucks at one of the mines. ”I just walked off the job one night, I thought ‘this is wrong, we’re destroying our own land’,” said Mercredi.

”Where I come from is ground zero,” Mercredi, who now works gathering traditional knowledge from elders in the community, told IPS

Dr. John O’Connor, Ft. Chipewayn’s former physician, catalogued a string of cases of cholangiocarcinoma, an uncommon cancer of the bile duct among members of the community. The disease normally strikes 1 in 100,000 and Dr. O’Connor reported six cases in Ft. Chip over a short period, in addition to other strange ailments. He sent results to the local toxicologist’s office. That’s when the pro-industry Alberta government stepped in.

In 2006, Alberta Health and Wellness filed a complaint with the College of Physicians and Surgeons of Alberta, alleging that Dr. O’Connor had engendered mistrust and raised undue alarm in Ft. Chipewayn. O’Connor left Alberta for Nova Scotia while the College of Physicians investigated the charges. He was cleared of wrongdoing in 2008 but decided not to return to Alberta.

”Dr. O’Connor was our martyr,” said Mercredi. ”He sacrificed part of his career to inform people about what was happening to us.”

While the Chief of Ft. Chipewayn has spoken out vigorously about the social and environmental impacts of rapid tar sands expansion, other First Nations, including the Ft. Mackay Band, have embraced the mega-project because they say it brings jobs, money and development to the region.

Mercredi and other critics the of development say fish from the Athabasca River, which supplies water to the tar sands, are exhibiting strange deformities and mutations. In August, a group of children pulled a fish with two mouths from Lake Athabasca, near an area where tar sands tailings water had leached into the soil.

”One of the companies admitted to our community that a tailings pond was leaking into a stream,” said Mercredi.

Elders from Ft. Chipewayn say the mutant fish is ”a sign of what will happen to human life,” according to testimony from a water conference held in the community in August.

Water is crucial for tar sands extraction: separating one barrel of oil from the sand requires at least three barrels of water.

According to peer-reviewed scientific articles written by Dr. David Schindler, Killam Memorial Chair and Professor of Ecology at the University of Alberta, the whole province and neighbouring regions will soon face ”a crisis in water quantity and quality with far-reaching implications.” Tar sands producers extract 2.5 million barrels of water per day from the Athabasca River.

Water becomes toxic during the oil extraction process and ends up in massive tailings ponds. In April, more than 400 ducks died after the flock landed on a tailings pond, owned by Syncrude, the largest tar sands consortium.

The largest tailings pond, controlled by Syncrude, contains 540 million cubic metres of poison waste water, making it the second largest dam on earth, according to the U.S. Department of the Interior.

”We are the most efficient user of water in the oil sands,” said Steve Gaudet, the environmental manager for Syncrude, a joint venture between Imperial Oil, ConocoPhillips, Petro Canada, Nexen and several smaller players.

During a tour of Syncrude’s main site, Gaudet told IPS that the consortium will eventually be able to ”reclaim” the tailings water, making it safe again, by mixing tailings with fresh water and gypsum, so the water becomes a solid.

”The industry has not demonstrated the ability to reclaim tailings ponds,” countered Simon Dyer from the Pembina Institute.

In March, the government of Alberta issued the first land reclamation certificate for a tar sands operator to Syncrude, for successfully reclaiming a 104-hectare parcel known as Gateway Hill. The company frequently showcases the area to visitors. A herd of bison graze nearby as Syncrude employees pass around boxed lunches to a delegation of journalists touring the area.

But, according to the Pembina Institute’s Simon Dyer, Gateway Hill ”isn’t representative of the challenge industry is facing” because the area is ”just topsoil that was stripped away” in previous decades. Over the long term, Dyer says the companies have to incorporate poison tailings into a dry landscape, and they have not proven their ability to do so.

While the gargantuan trucks trolling the land at Syncrude and Albian Sands can leave sceptical journalists in awe, they are not the most important tool for tar sands extraction. Roughly 20 percent of the oil here in northern Alberta can be extracted through surface mining; the rest requires underground techniques know as in-situ.

These underground techniques disturb less surface land, but critics say they are particularly energy intensive and wasteful. The energy equivalent of one barrel of oil is required to produce three barrels of oil from the tar sands, according to the Pembina Institute’s Dan Woynillowicz.

Cyclic steam stimulation, colloquially referred to as ”huff and puff”, is one popular in-situ method where oil companies blast steam into underground bitumen deposits through pipes for a month at a time. Once the bitumen is hot enough, other pipes will suck the oil back up to the surface.

Michael Mercredi says that First Nations are in a unique position to slow or stop tar sands development, but that doesn’t seem likely in Alberta’s current political climate. If anything will slow the world’s largest industrial project, and its voracious appetite for water and land, it will likely be factors far away from this province’s muskeg flatlands.

While most oil company officials are mum on exact figures, it is estimated that extracting one barrel of oil from the tar sands costs between 25-35 dollars. If the world economy hits a prolonged recession and the price of oil drops below 50 dollar a barrel, investors may look away from the tar sands.

Without a major recession, or political changes in United States, the largest consumer of tar sands crude, it seems likely that Caterpillar 797Bs will continue hauling oil 24/7, regardless of the environmental costs.

*This is the first of a three-part series investigating the political, environmental and social impacts of Canada’s oil sands development. Chris Arsenault holds the 2008/09 Phil Lind Fellowship at the University of British Columbia. A portion of his visit to Alberta was minded and financed by Shell Canada.