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Posts Tagged ‘environmental protection’

World Heritage Lists the Dolomites and Wadden Sea as Its Newest Natural Wonders

In Uncategorized on July 6, 2009 at 5:25 pm

Dolomites Image
photo: Martin Price

The Dolomites in Italy and the Wadden Sea in Germany are now the world’s newest natural wonders of the world listed by World Heritage Foundation. It takes years for the World Heritage Foundation to come to such conclusions but it’s not surprising why these two sites have been chosen.

The Dolomites
The Dolomites in Italy were added to the World Heritage List due to their outstanding natural beauty and the geological significance of their limestone formations. The Dolomites are a portion of the Alps located in Italy which extend from the Adige River to the Piave Valley. Known for their spectacular limestone walls and the immortalized fossil record that tells the tales of what once was. The fossil record illustrates the 200 million year history of the mountains.

Wadden Sea
photo: Pedro Rosabal

The Wadden Sea
The Wadden Sea is located at the southeastern part of the north sea and it’s known to be the largest unbroken system of inter-tidal sand and mud flats in the world. It is home to 6.1 million birds present at any one time more than 400,000 breeding pairs and an average of 10 to 12 million birds which pass through every year according to World Heritage. The diversity in wildlife is a result of the considerable mud flats that run throughout the area.

Coral Reef Loss in Southeast Asia to Reduce Food Supplies 80%: Strong International Action Needed

In coral reefs, Coral Triangle, marine protection, ocean, ocean acidification on May 26, 2009 at 11:56 am

fishing lombok indonesia photo
photo: sektordua via flickr

The effect that warming and ocean acidification will have on coral reefs will be devastating. At particular risk, a new report from World Wildlife Fund with the University of Queensland points out, is the Coral Triangle in Southeast Asia. Without strong action of constrain global temperature rise, coral in the region could be wiped out by 2100, leading to a decline in food production in the region by 80%, imperiling 100 million people:

The report, The Coral Triangle and Climate Change: Ecosystems, People and Societies at Risk, explains that though the Coral Triangle is just one percent of Earth’s surface, it contains 30% of all coral reefs, 76% of reef-building coral, 35% of coral reef fish species and is the spawning ground for many commercially-important fish species.

table coral photo
photo: Wikipedia

Food Loss, Rural-to-Urban Migration Increases
Prof Ove Hoegh-Guldberg of the University of Queensland, who led the study said that if we continue on the climate change trajectory we are on,

…people see the biological treasures of the Coral Triangle destroyed over the course of the century by rapid increases in ocean temperature, acidity and sea level, while the resilience of coastal environments also deteriorates under faltering coastal management. Poverty increases, food security plummets, economies suffer and coastal people migrate increasingly to urban areas.
Tens of millions of people are forced to move from rural to coastal settings due to loss of homes, food resources and income, putting pressure on regional cities and surrounding developed nations such as Australia and New Zealand.

Resource Loss Manageable if Strong International Action Taken
Though the report says that at this point some coral loss is probably inevitable, if strong emission reductions are made and the international community invests in strengthening the regions natural environment, there will be challenges for the region but they may well be manageable. How to do this?

Effective management of coastal resources through a range of options including locally-managed regional networks of marine protected areas, protection of mangrove and seagrass beds and effective management of fisheries results in a slower decline in these resources.

A copy of the report can be found  here:

The Coral Triangle and Climate Change

For other resources, visit Reports, Studies, Scientific Papers, Random PDF on the sidebar.

World Oceans Conference 2009 – 6 Rules of Thumb of Maintaining Healthy Reefs

In coral reefs, coral triangle initiative, marine protection, ocean on May 12, 2009 at 10:10 pm

coral reef diving photo

Photo via World Resources Institute Staff

At the World Oceans Conference 2009 in Manado, Indonesia, scientists are focusing on the Coral Reef Triangle, a section of ocean near the nations of Indonesia, the Philippines, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, East Timor and the Solomon islands. The Coral Reef Triangle is home to the largest number of diverse coral species on the planet, and while it remains relatively healthy right now, researchers know that it is only a matter of time before climate change and pollution do their damage…unless we put in place a few rules right now.

The six regional governments, Australia, and the US are all working to implement the Coral Reef Initiative, a move that puts forward six rules of thumb for how to maintain healthy coral reefs.

  1. Allow margins of error in extent and nature of protection, as insurance against unforeseen threats
  2. Spread risks among areas
  3. Aim to create networks of protected areas which (a) protect all the main types of reef creatures, processes and connections, known and unknown; (b) achieve sufficient protection for each type of reef habitat type, and for the whole region; (c) achieve maximum protection for all reef processes (d) contain several examples of particular reef types to spread the risk
  4. Protect whole reefs where possible; place buffer zones around core areas.
  5. Allow for reef species to spread over a range of distances, especially 20 km
  6. Use a range of conservation approaches, including marine protected areas.

The purpose of the rules is to make sure that even in areas where research about how problems like global climate change, over-fishing, and pollution is sparse, there are steps that can be taken to preserve the habitat.

“The Coral Triangle Initiative is one of the most important marine conservation measures ever undertaken anywhere in the world and the first to span several countries. It involves the six nations of Indonesia, the Philippines, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, East Timor and the Solomon islands, and is as much about nation building and food security as it is about reef conservation”

-Professor Terry Hughes, Director of the CoECRS

The World Ocean Conference runs through Friday, and more than 5,000 scientists are in attendance, hoping to work out ways to care for the oceans and reefs that are clearly in distress. And some countries, such as Indonesia, move that such countries with large sea territories should receive credit for the carbon storage capacities of their ocean areas, thereby reducing the country’s total carbon footprint and earning assistance from other countries in preserving marine areas. However, some people at the conference feel that more than loose rules and easy rewards should be put forward.

“We must make sure that we are not spectators at the climate talks but that those of us who speak for the ocean have a role… To get credit for preserving the ocean or avoiding deforestation is like getting credit for not beating your wife”

-Tony Haymet, Director of Scripps Institute for Oceanography of the University of California

I’ll update this post in due time as the Conference ends on Friday

Marc Ona Essangui awarded 2009 Goldman Environmental Prize

In environment on April 20, 2009 at 5:55 pm

A campaigner who was jailed during his battle to save the rainforest in Gabon has received a top international award.

Marc Ona Essangui was honoured for his fight to stop what he describes as a destructive mining project in the Ivindo National Park.

He is one of seven people from six continental regions to be awarded an equal share of the $900,000 (£600,000) 2009 Goldman Environmental Prize.

It has been described as “the Nobel Prize for grassroots environmentalism”.

Mr Ona has campaigned for three years against the Belinga mine project – a deal between the government in Gabon and the Chinese mining and engineering company, CMEC, to extract iron ore.

The project includes the construction of a large hydroelectric dam, which is already underway, to provide power for the mine.

The dam is being built on the Ivindo River, near the Kongou Falls, Gabon’s highest waterfall.

Mr Ona, who described the falls as “the most beautiful in central Africa”, said that Gabon’s government had failed to consult the local population and had not assessed the impact of the development on the environment before it gave permission for construction to begin.

He told BBC News that he hoped his receipt of the Goldman Prize would “draw international attention to just how precious this area is”.

Political protest

Mr Ona, who uses a wheelchair, dedicated his early career to improving education and communication infrastructure in Gabon, including working with the United Nations Development Programme. He later turned his attention to environmental issues.

He eventually decided to focus his efforts full time on the work of his own environmental NGO, Brainforest, which aims to protect the rainforest for the benefit local of communities.

“The government established 13 national parks here, and I became interested in all the activities within them,” he said.

“In 2006, my colleagues and I noticed that roads were being built within Ivindo.”

(The Ivindo River in Gabon’s Ivindo National Park flows down rapids and then into Kongou Falls. A dam project to power a Chinese-financed iron ore mining venture is threatening to destroy the falls. Photo: Candace Feit for The New York Times)

When Mr Ona investigated, he discovered that there had been no environmental impact studies carried out before the road building started.

On its website, the Gabonese government describes the national parks as having been “classified for the conservation of Gabon’s rich biodiversity”.

The key goals of the national park scheme, it says, are preservation of “the wealth of the ecosystem… for current and future generations” and stimulating “the development of ecotourism as an economic alternative to the exploitation of natural resources”.

Mr Ona said: “All of this construction was carried out illegally and against the code of the national parks.”

He also unearthed and leaked a copy of the Belinga mine project agreement between the government and CMEC, revealing that CMEC had been offered a 25-year tax break as part of the deal.

“When we really started to look into the deal, we noticed that it was China, not Gabon, that was the major beneficiary,” he said.

Under pressure

He and his colleagues embarked on their campaign, working with other environmental NGOs, holding news conferences and meeting with local communities.

“The government even motivated some protests against the NGOs involved,” he recalled.

“They alleged that we were working [on behalf of] Western powers, and we received a lot of pressure to stop the campaign.”

This culminated in Mr Ona being arrested and charged with “incitement to rebellion”.

He was jailed by the Gabonese judicial police on 31 December 2008; but following an internationally co-ordinated campaign for his release, he was freed on 12 January 2009.

Since June 2006, however, he has been banned from travelling outside the country.

His passport was returned to him only 24 hours before he was due to travel to San Francisco for the Goldman award ceremony.

There has been no construction in Ivindo for almost a year, but Mr Ona says this has more to do with the economic crisis and the price of iron ore than with the Gabonese government backing down.

He has no plans to give up his quest.

“Some of the money from this award will go to the functioning of Brainforest, and the rest will be allocated to setting up small- and medium-sized businesses for local communities,” he said.

“I want to set up a clinic near Ivindo where the local people can be treated using traditional medicine. Some of the money will serve to establish this health centre for all of those communities.”

No fear

The organisers of the Goldman Prize describe the six winners as “a group of fearless grassroots leaders, taking on government and corporate interests and working to improve the environment for people in their communities”.

Among the other 2009 recipients are Maria Gunnoe from West Virginia, US, who has faced death threats for her outspoken activism to stop destruction of the Appalachia by the coal industry.

Also rewarded are Russian scientist Olga Speranskaya, who connected NGOs across Eastern Europe and the Caucasus region to identify and safely remove toxic chemical stockpiles, and Rizwana Hasan, Bangladesh’s leading environmental attorney, whose legal advocacy led to tighter regulations on the ship-breaking industry.

New Limits to Antarctica tourism

In environment on April 20, 2009 at 5:42 pm

(Image Credit: AdventureCollection on Flickr)

Countries with ties to Antarctica have adopted US proposals to limit tourism in the region, in a bid to protect the fragile ecosystem of the continent.

Parties to the Antarctic Treaty agreed to limit the size of cruise ships and the number of tourists taken ashore at a meeting in the US city of Baltimore.

Limiting tourism has taken on urgency due to a surge in visits and a number of cruise ship accidents.

Antarctic visits have risen from 6,700 in 1992-93 to over 45,000 last season.

The agreed limits will only become legally binding once ratified by each of the 28 nations who have signed the Antarctic Treaty, launched in Washington 50 years ago.

The restrictions do not set out an enforcement mechanism or penalties, but require member countries to prevent ships with more than 500 passengers from landing in Antarctica and to allow a maximum of 100 passengers on shore at any given time.

Another resolution adopted at the meeting places a mandatory safety code on vessels operating in the region, while a third enhances environmental protection for the entire Antarctic ecosystem.

Two cruise ships ran aground during the 2008-09 season, and officials documented several incidents which carried a risk of major contamination.

The most high-profile accident in the region was the sinking of the M/S Explorer cruise ship in November 2007.

Antarctica is the unique home to several varieties of penguin, an important base for others such as seals, and a vital feeding ground for whales.

Source: BBC Online
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