Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

103 - Earth's Tree News

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

Today for you 37 news items about Earth's trees. Location, number and

subject listed below. Condensed / abbreviated article is listed

further below.

 

Can be viewed on the web at http://www.livejournal.com/users/olyecology or

by sending a blank email message to earthtreenews-

 

--British Columbia: 1) Development threatens old trees, 2) Treesit

update, 3) Aligning private and Crown land logging rules, 4) at-risk

species, 5)from forestry to recreation and tourism,

--Oregon: 6) Wilderness history, 7) 'new' logging 'experiment,' 8)

State lands needs more logging, 9) Humongous fungus, 10) We're the

cause of extinctions,

--Montana: 11) Plum Creek tax scams and REIT adventures catch up to 'em

--Kentucky: 12) State forest land expansion

--UK: 13) Sennybridge protest continues on after one year

--Zimbabwe: 14) Stumps in the heart of Mukuvisi Woodlands

--South Africa: 15) All the wrong reason to log

--Congo: 16) Logging road research

--Burundi: 17) Save Kibira Forest

--Niger: 18) Poor farmers reforest on the cheap

--Mumbai: 19) Save the precious mangroves and salts pans

--Mexico: 20) Forest defender murder still unnoticed, 21) Sierra Gorda Biosphere

--Trinidad and Tobago: 22) Slash and Burn reversing aforestation again

--Jamaica: 23) Charcoal demands in Daniel Town causing deforestation,

--Honduras: 24) Traffickers of illegal wood overpower and outspend government

--Caribbean Island: 25) Giant log rafts brought frogs to the island

--South America: 26) Spanish Cedar left unprotected

--Peru: 27) Sign on for peoples and forests of Tahuamanu region of Madre de Dios

--Brazil: 28) Hydro in Rondonia, 29) Decline in Deforestation, 30)

Google saves trees,

--Ecuador: 31) Yasuni National Park has huge untapped oil fields,

--Indonesia: 32) Permai Rainforest Resort, 33) Community Forest

Program, 34) community logging pilot program, 35) Aceh declares a

logging moratorium,

--Australia: 36) Wilderness Society sues feds and Gunns Ltd., 37)Beth

Schultz honored,

 

 

British Columbia:

 

1) On the Western edge of the city, there's a stand of 500-year-old

trees and mossy old growth forest Ray Zimmerman wants me to see. To

get there, he leads me on a hike straight uphill from the Trans-Canada

Highway, past a railway trestle, across a cold creek, through

waist-high ferns and salal into a deepening silence. We're on a ridge

above Niagara Creek in the Sooke Hills Wilderness Regional Park, which

borders Goldstream Provincial Park, where we left Zimmerman's old blue

Toyota wagon. It's the best stand of old growth on southern Vancouver

Island that I know, he says. The forest feels like Cathedral Grove

near Parksville, except you can get to it on city transit. On the way

up, you can look back across the highway to Mount Finlayson and the

crane adding the next layer to Langford's Bear Mountain development.

This kind of area should have the highest protection, says Zimmerman.

There's no more of it around down here. But lately he's noticed some

ill winds. The first gust came on January 31 this year when the

province's forest ministry released 12,000 hectares of Western Forest

Products Ltd.'s private lands in the area from management under the

Tree Farm Licence system. First nation leaders and environmentalists

quickly condemned the move, which was widely seen as a gift to a large

B.C. Liberal Party donor with the public gaining nothing in exchange.

The second breeze to catch Zimmerman's attention was a quiet decision

on April 18 by the Regional Water Supply Commission to greatly

increase the amount of water it pipes to Sooke. The CRD is borrowing

$26 million to replace an aging water line that most accept needs

attention. But the replacement will be a modern, larger pipe down the

Galloping Goose right of way that will be capable of providing water

for many, many more people. The increase will serve Sooke, but it will

also be available if and when the sprawling forest lands sprout

houses. And in what may well be the biggest blow of all, the

province's transportation ministry is looking at the Malahat corridor

to see how the highway can be improved at large public expense that

will inevitably increase the number of people commuting into Victoria

from Mill Bay, Cobble Hill, Duncan and beyond. The government has

eliminated the possibility of building a bridge across Finlayson Arm,

but at least two of the remaining proposals involve blazing a route

right through the old growth forest Zimmerman has brought me to see.

http://web.bcnewsgroup.com/portals/monday/

 

 

2) In Victoria, where the rate of " development " is eclipsed nowhere,

save the manic building booms of China, what is left of our urban, and

suburban wild spaces is disappearing fast. The next step, logically is

up-island. Langford council and its mayor have bent to the notion of

unrestricted expansion in the name of increased tax revenues. They're

encouraged by the Provincial Capital Commission, a quasi-governmental

body filled with Chamber of Commerce denizens, determined that making

your pile is the preeminent order of existence, regardless if you must

do so by scrambling over the bodies of the remainder of the wilds.

They are currently behind the expansion plans of the Bear Mountain

development that will, if unchecked, swallow whole the lands abutting

the Highlands, severing the long-touted " sea-to-sea greenbelt "

ambitions of the TLC (The Land Conservancy society). This expansion

naturally requires millions of tax-payer dollars to build the second

clover leaf highway exchange to facilitate the driving needs of the

anticipated thousands of wealthy retirees who will pay the millions

for monster homes next to the acres of golf courses cut into the

mountains and valleys of the priceless wild lands. But there is a

small glitch, a fly in the proverbial butter of Bear Mountain's idyll.

Perched on a small platform in the tree canopy of a small patch of

strategically chosen forest land in the path of the proposed highway

interchange sits a dedicated defender. Working together in shifts, the

tree-sit has been occupied these last two months (at time of writing),

and those there vow to maintain the position in the path of the

bulldozers and chainsaws.

http://www.pacificfreepress.com/content/view/1293/81/

 

 

3) An organization that manages B.C.'s private forest lands has

stopped short of supporting a regional district initiative that would

see private and Crown lands logged to the same environmental

standards. Wednesday in Port Alberni, Rod Davis, a member of the

Private Managed Forest Land Council, said his organization is

interested in working with the regional district, but there are limits

to what it can do. " It's very political, " he said. " We are not a

political body. " Representative of the PMFLC were in Port Alberni

Wednesday to speak to the regional district's committee of the whole.

The regional district invited the organization because it was

concerned about logging practices on private land. The PMFLC,

established as an independent agency under the Private Managed Forest

Land Act, consists of two government and two company representatives

who choose a chair. The council is involved in strategic planning,

sets and monitors forest practices, and enforces standards. It has no

authority over the size of cut-blocks, their design or even a

company's rate of harvest. Tony Bennett, director for Area C, Long

Beach, said the regional district has one bottom line, and directors

want one standard for logging on public and private lands. He asked

how much different would the Beaufort Range now look had forest

companies logged according to public standards. " It would have

probably looked different, " said Trevor Swan, chair of the council.

Mayor Ken McRae, Port Alberni, also asked if the PMFLC encourages

member companies to meet forestry standards set by ISO and CSA. Davis

said while his organization morally encourages those standards, it

can't do anything to enforce them.

http://www.westcoaster.ca/modules/AMS/article.php?storyid=2185

 

4) The report says the at-risk species are found throughout the

province, but most are clustered in four main " hot spots " on southern

Vancouver Island, the Lower Mainland, the Rocky Mountain Trench and

the Okanagan Valley. " These areas of high species endangerment

coincide with intense human population density, expansion and

development, resulting in a number of proximate threats to

biodiversity; including habitat loss and fragmentation, pollution,

invasive species and the threat of over-exploitation [from hunting and

fishing], " the report states. The study, to be published next week in

the scientific journal Biodiversity, is critical of the provincial

government for not adequately protecting key habitat, and for failing

to bring in endangered-species legislation, as Ontario did recently.

" Successive governments have not put a priority on protecting

biodiversity, but have relied on the natural riches of B.C. to attract

tourists and new residents and build communities, " the report says.

" The cost of losing B.C.'s rich biodiversity is immeasurable. B.C. has

a domestic and an international responsibility to stop squandering its

remaining biological wealth and ecological integrity. " The report

recommends the government create endangered-species legislation, adopt

a conservation approach for land-use planning, complete a provincewide

protected-areas strategy and provide funding to fully monitor species

at risk. The study coincides with the release yesterday of a petition

by 52 biologists and botanists calling on the B.C. government to

protect an endangered population of mountain caribou. The signatories

include internationally known author and biologist Farley Mowat,

Bristol Foster, who helped to establish the first ecological reserves

in B.C., and Steve Herrero, one of the world's top bear experts. The

group called for a moratorium on all logging in old-growth forest that

is current or potential habitat for mountain caribou. The mountain

caribou population in B.C. has dropped from a historic level of about

10,000 to less than 2,000.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20070607.BCENDANGERED07/TPStory\

/Environment

 

5) A report for the B.C. government says the economy of Vancouver

Island's west coast should shift from forestry to recreation and

tourism. Forests and Range Minister Rich Coleman says the 19

recommendations from the report are aimed at diversifying the Port

Alberni region's economy. The consultant's report by Macauley and

Associates Consulting Inc. says Port Alberni did not receive the same

benefits from 2003 forestry-policy changes as the rest of the

province, that forestry in the region has been in decline for 20 years

and that the trend will continue. Among the recommendations are

suggestions that the Port Alberni area be marketed as a retirement

destination. Coleman says he will be discussing the recommendations

with stakeholders in the Port Alberni area, which is home to a large

paper mill as well as a number of sawmills and lumber mills. The

report says the impact on the Alberni Valley has been particularly

marked owing to the relative past prosperity of its forest industry

and workers.

http://www.canada.com/theprovince/news/story.html?id=fda89791-057b-4de1-b1cd-a75\

12a27f3b0

Oregon:

 

6) The Cascade Mountains create a thin band of rugged, spectacularly

wrinkled geography from northern California to southern British

Columbia. It is the dominant geographical feature in the Northwest, a

region often referred to as " Cascadia. " Most of the range is national

forest land, and debates over designating wilderness areas in those

federal lands have been continuous since 1950. In southern Oregon, the

range sprawls across the landscape like a discarded towel, with a maze

of deeply eroded river valleys. The ridges do not reach high

elevations in this region, but the slopes are extremely steep and

densely covered with a thick mat of brush and forests. Rich stands of

Douglas fir dominate the vegetation here, providing valuable sources

of timber even to this day. Partly due to the value of these forests

to the timber industry, the wilderness areas in this part of the

Cascades tend to be quite small. Although debated for decades, many of

these were not established until 1984, after much effort on the part

of wilderness advocates to protect these forests, such as those around

Waldo Lake, with legislation. The volcanic legacy of the Cascades is

clear as one heads north toward the Three Sisters of central Oregon,

site of the first major postwar wilderness debate in the Northwest,

1950-64. These relatively young volcanic cones rise to 10,000 feet and

sit atop the " Old Cascades, " the broad, ancient lava flows that form

the base of the Oregon Cascades. The Three Sisters support a series of

glaciers, and their aprons of lava and pumice create a mostly treeless

barrier around their bases. The Old Cascades, with their steep slopes

and dense forests, spread far to the west, until they settle into the

Willamette Valley. Drier forests of ponderosa pine and lodgepole pine

reach up shorter slopes from the east out of the Deschutes River

basin. These lower forests, especially on the west side, were the

focus of wilderness debates beginning in the 1950s. This article is

adapted from a new book, Drawing Lines in the Forest: Creating

Wilderness Areas in the Pacific Northwest

http://www.crosscut.com/history/3976/

 

7) The idea behind the U.S. Forest Service experiment is to determine

whether treated areas would be able to change the direction of a

wildfire, or slow it down, making it easier for firefighters to

tackle. The agency decided Friday to log or thin out trees in areas

specifically selected to influence fire behavior on a 160,000-acre

stretch of mixed conifer forest. After more than two years of analysis

and computer modeling about what would work best on the landscape, the

Forest Service came up with three options. The alternative that will

be used involves conducting commercial logging on about 4,300 acres,

while removing smaller fuels on more than 3,500 acres out of the

160,000-acre project area. " What we're doing is kind of the minimum

amount of treatments that we can to reduce risk, " Boehme said. " We

don't want to modify late successional habitat if we can help it, but

we do want to avoid having it just go. " The Nature Conservancy and the

U.S. Fire Learning Network, an association of groups and agencies that

includes the conservancy, have not yet taken a stand on activities in

the late successional reserves, Waltz said.

http://www.oregonlive.com/newsflash/regional/index.ssf?/base/news-19/11814260832\

58520.xml & storyl

ist=orlocal

 

8) Pressed by coastal counties hard up for timber dollars, Oregon's

Board of Forestry on Wednesday reopened the question of whether to

increase logging in the Tillamook and Clatsop state forests that

blanket the Coast Range. If the counties get their way, that could

mean more clear-cutting and a shift closer to industrial logging

strategies with shorter cycles of cutting than the more conservative

approach in place now. But environmental groups also hope they can

join the fray and win better protection for essential salmon streams

and other wildlife habitat. Close to a dozen county commissioners

attended the meeting Wednesday to show support for higher logging

rates. They said they are especially worried because of uncertainties

about federal money intended to offset reduced logging rates on

federal lands. " If it wasn't for state timber revenue, we'd be in big

trouble in Tillamook County right now, " said Tillamook County

Commissioner Tim Josi. Rural wages in Oregon are about 30 percent

behind those in the Portland metro area, he said, with logging one of

the few sources of good jobs. Counties aren't the only ones upset with

what's happening in the state forests. Environmental groups also said

the plan didn't set aside enough of the landscape for fish and

wildlife. Instead, state foresters pursued an experimental strategy to

use logging to sculpt a diverse blend of forest ages and sizes to

satisfy wildlife needs.

http://www.oregonlive.com/news/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/news/1181183129203550.x\

ml & coll=7

 

9) The U.S. Forest Service has adopted an informal live-and-let-live

policy for the enormous tree killer it calls the " humongous fungus. "

The huge root-rot infestation underlies 2,200 acres east of Prairie

City in a remote corner of eastern Oregon's Blue Mountains at an

elevation of about 6,500 feet near the Strawberry Mountain and

Monument Rock wilderness areas. The Forest Service plans to publish a

brochure about the gigantic fungus, Armillaria ostoyae, this summer.

" There is no way to eliminate it, " said Malheur National Forest

ecologist and tree expert Mike Tatum of John Day. Most people walking

by would never know the fungus lurks just below the ground's surface,

occupying its time in the quiet business of sending out

shoestring-like tentacles called rhizomorphs and wrapping them around

tree roots. Its sheer mass -- it's roughly the size of 1,600 football

fields -- makes Herman Melville's fictional white whale Moby Dick seem

like a tadpole. And it could get bigger. In terms of age, Armillaria

is a fungiform Methuselah. Researchers say it may have been 100 years

old when Alexander the Great conquered the known world in 330 B.C. And

some estimates suggest it could be 8,000 years old, said Forest

Service researcher Catherine Parks, who has spent 10 years studying

it. The fungus can be found worldwide, but prefers dense,

closed-canopy forests -- the kind that allow hikers to see little of

the sky as they tramp along, Tatum said. The only obvious signs of its

presence are the gaps created when it kills trees. Such openings

aren't necessarily bad because they allow fungus-resistant tree

species and undergrowth to get a foothold, Parks said. And when a tree

dies, it recycles its nutrients into the soil for trees that come

after it, she said. " It looks like latex paint, " Parks said of the

telltale mycelia. " You can peel it off in a layer. " From an aircraft,

biologists see " little rings of dead trees " when Armillaria is present

in a forest, Parks said. The fungus never kills all the trees, but the

rings sometimes coalesce into larger patterns of mortality, she said.

Tatum says a big, hot wildfire might someday cut the humongous fungus

down to size. A 5,000-acre conflagration sideswiped it about four

years ago, and the flames killed host trees and energized soil

organisms hostile to the fungus, he said.

http://www.oregonlive.com/news/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/news/118136685785140.xm\

l & coll=7

 

10) How long 'til we get the hard fact that the indicator species that

are disappearing are pointing a ghostly finger -- tentacle, talon,

hoof, claw -- in our direction? A language we don't understand or are

incapable of hearing is whispering, " This will affect you. " Young

people armed with Kryptonite locks and incendiary devices took to the

logging roads and ski resorts to try to translate the message to the

mainstream, who wrote them off because of their unsociable black

hoodies, unkempt hair, and dangerous ways. The FBI's Operation

Backfire swept up the " eco-terrorists, " who are safely sequestered in

jail for many years to come. Jails, zoos, hmm. Last month I was

visiting my old home in rural Oregon. I stood outside around midnight,

an umbrella of blackness punctuated by stars overhead. There was a

stillness city dwellers can barely conceptualize. The adjacent 40

acres is Bureau of Land Management property, a steep hillside covered

with great old trees that provide homes for hives of wild bees, for

pileated woodpeckers and even for a pair of spotted owls, documented

and certified. Those two birds of prey are the only things between

that grove of Douglas firs and a chainsaw, the only reason the trees

haven't been transformed into board feet. As I stood in the darkness,

I heard the distinct four-note call of the spotted owl, whoop ...

wo-hu ... hoo. The sound of the wild. They may survive in zoos, the

way I sometimes feel like I survive in the city, but will they live?

If we scour the landscape of the Pacific Northwest, sweeping up the

last few owls that have survived into this precarious future and cart

them off to zoos and labs for a lifetime of forced procreation and

artificial insemination, yet do nothing to address the systemic causes

of extinction, we'll be losing more than a species. We'll be losing

something we seem incapable of even recognizing, and there is no

feel-good effect in that.

http://gristmill.grist.org/story/2007/6/6/14649/11772

 

Montana:

 

11) The state of Montana's largest landowner, visible across some 1.3

million forest-acres, is set to become even more noticeable in coming

months, with a new public relations campaign already under way. The

company is meeting with public relations and marketing professionals

in Missoula, and with economists and demographers, too, to help better

target its message. " We absolutely need to be more involved in the

communities where we own land, " Budinick said. " We need to be more

engaged. " That's because " Plum Creek's business model has changed. "

The timber company is now firmly in the business of selling

residential real estate, Budinick said, and sometimes of developing

that real estate, too. The Plum Creek Land Co., a relatively new real

estate division of the parent company, represents a fast-growing

market for what were previously forestry professionals. That business

change, however, also represents a fundamental land-use shift. When

homes replace working forests, many are affected, Budinick said.

Hunters and anglers can lose access. Communities can shoulder added

tax burdens. Land values can increase. Wildlife habitat can be

fragmented. Since 1999, Plum Creek has been organized as a Real Estate

Investment Trust, which means it pays no corporate income taxes in

Montana. Instead, REITs pass through, as dividends, some 90 percent of

their earnings to shareholders, who then pay personal income taxes to

the states in which they live. Many shareholders do not live in

Montana, however, and some lawmakers complained that profits made in

Montana were being exported for tax purposes. A proposal was made to

end the tax exclusion those dividends now enjoy. To continue to allow

the exclusion, lawmakers argued, would give REITs an unfair advantage

over other Montana companies. In full-page newspaper ads, Plum Creek

made much of its role as a good corporate neighbor, keying on jobs and

benefits. " Imposing a special tax directed primarily at Plum Creek

would make the company's Montana operations less profitable and

therefore less likely to continue to invest in the state, " the ads

said. http://www.missoulian.com/articles/2007/06/11/news/local/news02.txt

 

Kentucky:

 

12) Last July, local, state and federal politicians helped celebrate

Kentucky's Division of Forestry's adding the 1,110-acre tract to its

bank of managed woodland, but aside from a the addition of a few

parking areas and an unmarked stand of trees thinned for their health,

Knobs State Forest has been relatively quiet. But that's not

necessarily a bad thing. Unlike the State Parks' system, Kentucky's

six state forests are managed to provide sustainable, working

woodlands. While state forests are open to the public, they don't

offer the groomed trails and playgrounds state parks often do.

Instead, state forests offer trees, and in the case of Knobs State

Forest, hills and trees. The land is managed and maintained to provide

healthy timber stand that may one day be harvested for the wood

industry. The land is also used as a training ground for woodland

owners and foresters. Located between Interstate 65 and Boy Scouts of

Amer-ica's Camp Crooked Creek in southern Bullitt County, Knobs is the

only state-owned forest in central Kentucky. The original 1,110-acre

tract was purchased by the state last year from Dr. Greg Kuhns and his

sister, Ann van de Steur. Funding for the $3 million purchase was made

possible with federal dollars allotted to the state via the Forest

Legacy Program — a program began in 1990 to help private landowners

protect valuable natural resources by selling property to state forest

agencies. In November, the Division of Forestry tapped FLP funds again

to purchase a 429-acre tract adjoining the former Kuhns' property from

the estate of the late Stephen Aaron. The now 1,539-acre forest

extends a swath of protected woodland from deep inside Hardin County

to the interstate corridor — making a continuous forest of more than

16,000 acres. More property is being scoped out by forestry officials

for acquisition. In a previous interview, Kentucky Division of

Forestry's Steve Gray said the tract could grow as large as 3,000

acres. http://www.newsenterpriseonline.com/articles/2007/06/10/news/news06.txt

 

 

UK:

 

13) " Tree people " from all over Britain have occupied land near

Sennybridge, Brecon since January, trying to prevent a section of the

190-mile pipeline being built. But a High Court judge sitting in

Cardiff yesterday granted the National Grid immediate possession of

the occupied woodland. Local people living near the woodland had

expressed concern at the effect the protesters were having on the

site. One woman who asked not to be named said, " They have been

burning logs and going to the toilet all over the place. It's a mess

at a time when a lot of tourists are coming to Brecon. " I'm glad

they've been told to go. When the pipe is laid it will be covered over

and we will not know any work has been done at all. " But one of the

protesters, known only as Sam, said yesterday, " I don't care what the

National Grid says, this place is going to be permanently scarred. " He

said the protesters knew the eviction order would come but that the

aim was to highlight what the National Grid project was doing to the

countryside. Another protester, Heather, indicated after the court

case yesterday the occupation at Brecon might not be over. She said,

" Some may go but others might stay until the bitter end. " Last night a

number of protesters living in the trees were preparing themselves for

yet another night among the branches.

http://icwales.icnetwork.co.uk/0100news/0200wales/tm_headline=judge-allows-evict\

ion-of-gas-pipel

ine-protesters & method=full & objectid=19263421 & siteid=50082-name_page.html

 

Zimbabwe:

 

14) Israel Thebe points in despair to dozens of fresh stumps that have

appeared overnight in the heart of Mukuvisi Woodlands, on the

outskirts of Harare. " It takes a good 50 years for a tree to grow

fully, " said the forestry manager. " This took place in just one

night. " Mukuvisi has long been a popular destination for day trips by

schoolchildren from the Zimbabwean capital who are able to catch a

glimpse of wildlife such as giraffe, zebra and several antelope

species on their doorstep. The woodlands however have also seen a

recent upsurge in night-time visitors — axe-wielding poachers who make

a bee-line for its forests in order to feed the demand for firewood in

a country where power cuts have become perennial. Even though the

authorities try to put a halt to the scalping, Thebe fears it is a

losing battle as people become desperate to keep warm during winter.

" We have had to hire night guards specifically to look at that but the

wood poachers always find ways to evade detection. Give it another two

years and most of this forest will be gone, " he said. Even the

saplings are not spared as the poachers strip the bark from the tender

shrubs to weave into rope to tie bundles of stolen firewood. Residents

from Harare's townships unfazed by prospects of arrest for breaching

forestry laws, are often seen carrying bundles of firewood or pushing

cartfuls of chopped wood from neighbouring farms. Their sense of

impunity is not surprising given that anyone convicted of cutting down

trees protected under the forestry act pays a fine of Z$2500 — the

equivalent of five US cents at black market rates.

http://business.iafrica.com/features/940196.htm

 

South Africa:

 

15) White Township supervisors said they have a plan to log out many

of the old, dying trees in Whites Woods to preserve the land and keep

the forest clean. " The township wants to make sure the forest is in

healthy condition and there for a long time to come. The plan we have

prepared will help manage that forest area. " White Township Supervisor

Larry Garner said. A local group, who call themselves " The Friends of

Whites Woods " disagree with the plan, they said the forest is better

off without any logging because logged forests are more prone to

forest fires. The group is organizing petitions and public hikes

against the logging plan, and they hope the township makes a decision

against any logging after a public meeting scheduled for Monday night.

http://www.wjactv.com/news/13470567/detail.html

 

Congo:

 

16) Logging roads are rapidly expanding in the Congo rainforest,

report researchers who have constructed the first satellite-based maps

of road construction in Central Africa. The authors say the work will

help conservation agencies, governments, and scientists better

understand how the expansion of logging is impacting the forest, its

inhabitants, and global climate. Analyzing Landsat satellite images of

4 million square miles of Central African rainforest acquired between

1976 and 2003, a team of researchers led by Dr. Nadine Laporte of the

Woods Hole Research Center (WHRC) mapped nearly 52,000 km of logging

roads in the forests of Cameroon, Central African Republic, Equatorial

Guinea, Gabon, Republic of Congo, and Democratic Republic of Congo

(DRC). They found that road density has increased dramatically since

the 1970s and that around 29 percent of the remaining Congo rainforest

was " likely to have increased wildlife hunting pressure because of

easier access and local market opportunities " offered by new logging

towns and roads. " Roads provide access, and this research provides

clear evidence that the rainforests of Central Africa are not as

remote as they once were….a bad thing for many of the species that

call it home, " said Jared Stabach, a researcher at WHRC and a

co-author of the paper. The authors report that the highest logging

road densities were in Cameroon and Equatorial Guinea, while the most

rapidly changing area was in northern Republic of Congo (Brazzaville),

where the rate of road construction more than quadrupled--from 156

kilometers per year to over 660 kilometers--between 1976 and 2003. The

scientists found evidence of new frontier of logging expansion in DRC,

which has just emerged from nearly a decade of civil war. The authors

note that more than 600,000 square kilometers of forest are presently

under logging concessions, while just 12% of the area is protected.

Most logging in the area is focused on selective harvesting of

high-value tree species, like African mahoganies, for export, rather

than clear-cutting. http://news.mongabay.com/2007/0607-congo.html

 

Burundi:

 

17) The destruction of the natural ecosystem of Kibira Forest – the

country's largest, for example, has contributed to the adverse effects

of climate change in the country, according to Sabushimike. This had

subsequently led to the degradation of agricultural land, because of

the intense usage of soil in many areas. The other major environmental

concern was the degradation of marshlands and lakes, due to the

adverse climatic conditions experienced in such areas. As a result,

drought and desertification have led to a drastic drop in water levels

in the lakes and the drying-up of marshlands. Mining has also

contributed to the destruction of the environment, Sabushimike said.

The consequence of all this environmental degradation has been

increased poverty, especially among rural communities; food insecurity

arising from poor agricultural practices; diminishing waters

resources; a reduction in activities in the agricultural, forest,

energy and health sectors. Burundi is one of several African countries

to have signed conventions such as the National Plan of Action for

Adaptation to Climate Changes and the Framework Convention for

National Communication on Climate Change. The first aims to improve

seasonal climate forecasts for early warning purposes; rehabilitating

degraded agricultural areas; protecting natural ecosystems;

capacity-building in the prevention and management of natural

disasters due to climate change; and, community sensitisation. To mark

World Environment Day on 5 June, the government has organised weeklong

activities. These include rubbish collection and tree-planting in the

city as well as in all the provinces, and clean-up exercises in rural

and urban areas.

http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/IRIN/ca1b26aaf79978f5ba80bfe2fe3c8c5f.h\

tm

 

Niger:

 

18) GUIDAN BAKOYE: In this dust-choked region, long seen as an

increasingly barren wasteland decaying into desert, millions of trees

are flourishing, thanks in part to poor farmers whose simple methods

cost little or nothing at all. Better conservation and improved

rainfall have led to at least 3 million newly tree-covered hectares,

or 7.4 million acres, in Niger, researchers have found. And this has

been achieved largely without relying on the large- scale planting of

trees or other expensive methods often advocated by African

politicians and aid groups for halting desertification, the process by

which soil loses its fertility. Recent studies of vegetation patterns,

based on detailed satellite images and on-the-ground inventories of

trees, have found that Niger, a place of persistent hunger and

deprivation, has recently added millions of new trees and is now far

greener than it was 30 years ago. These gains, moreover, have come at

a time when the population of Niger has exploded, confounding the

conventional wisdom that population growth leads to the loss of trees

and accelerates land degradation, scientists studying Niger say. The

vegetation is densest, researchers have found, in some of the most

densely populated regions of the country. " The general picture of the

Sahel is much less bleak than we tend to assume, " said Chris Reij, a

soil conservationist who has been working for more than 30 years in

the Sahel, a semiarid belt that spans Africa just below the Sahara and

is home to some of the poorest people on Earth. Reij, who helped lead

a study on Niger's vegetation patterns published last summer, said,

" Niger was for us an enormous surprise. " About 20 years ago, farmers

like Ibrahim Danjimo realized something terrible was happening to

their fields. " We look around, all the trees were far from the

village, " said Danjimo, a farmer in his 40s who has been working the

rocky, sandy soil of this tiny village since he was a child.

" Suddenly, the trees were all gone. "

http://www.iht.com/articles/2007/02/11/news/niger.php

 

Mumbai:

 

19) There is a vast stretch of land consisting of precious mangroves

and salts pans running parallel to the eastern express highway of

Mumbai. These lands so far were left untouched because it was

protected under the coastal regulation zone. There is not much land

available in Mumbai for the builders to exploit for construction of

buildings. In the eighties the prime upmarket Nariman Point came up

after much of the land near to the Arabian Sea was reclaimed for

constructing huge skyscrapers for accommodating offices. Today the

market prices of these offices are the most expensive compared to

those in New York and Tokyo. Since then the construction activity in

Mumbai has become a booming and thriving industry. The Maharashtra

government is attempting to replicate Mumbai city in line with

Shanghai, China by constructing a number of flyovers and undertaking

road widening projects. The politicians and the builders are raking in

the moolah out of the construction boom. Mumbai also houses one of

Asia's largest slums and is nicknamed Slumbai. Slums are a dent in the

image of Mumbai city being projected as another Shanghai. The previous

government came up with idea of slum rehabilitation programs, which is

followed by the present regime. The slums holding up the prime land in

the city are demolished and sold to the builders. They have to

construct free houses for the slum dwellers and construction cost is

recovered by allotting them free hold land to be sold to private

parties. Mumbai was once known for having several textile mills in

central Mumbai. Today the mills have been replaced by swanky

apartments and malls. The builders have consumed most lands in Mumbai

and are now eying the mangroves and salt pans located near eastern

express highway. These mangroves act as a protective barrier against

the high tides, floods and tsunami. Besides it is a natural holding

pond for rainwater, allowing water to drain into the sea.

http://forests.org/articles/reader.asp?linkid=77670

 

Mexico:

 

20) " It has been 24 days since the murder and they still haven't

arrested anyone. The people of San Juan Atzingo are desperate. They

are worried about their safety, they're scared, " said Greenpeace

activist Hector Magallon. Zamora, 21, was with three uncles and a

brother when he was attacked on May 15. His brother Misael, 16, was

injured. Illegal logging destroys some 26,000 hectares (64,000 acres)

of Mexican forest each year, the government says, putting Mexico near

the top of a UN list of nations losing primary forest fastest.

Environmental activists say the figure is far higher. Mexico's justice

system is famously ineffective, thanks to a mix of corruption and

incompetence. President Felipe Calderon pledged " zero tolerance "

against illegal loggers earlier this year, but environmentalists say

the gangs enjoy ever greater protection. " This gang knows it has

people looking after it. They have protectors, " Ildefonso Zamora said.

An anti-logging activist himself, he has received death threats since

2005, when he reported the men now suspected of killing his son.

Chopping down trees is a lucrative source of cash for impoverished

indigenous communities in rural central Mexico. In San Juan Atzingo,

some 3,000 of a total 10,800 hectares of forest have been cleared or

thinned by illegal logging.

http://www.thepeninsulaqatar.com/Display_news.asp?section=World_News & subsection=\

Americas & month=J

une2007 & file=World_News2007060984255.xml

 

21) Pressure on natural resources and biodiversity in Mexico's Sierra

Gorda Biosphere Reserve has been reduced as a result of the emigration

of half its human inhabitants -- some 50,000 people -- to the United

States. The local authorities of the reserve, which covers 384,000

hectares in the central-eastern state of Querétaro, recognise this

fact. Meeting here are the extremes of desert, semi-tropical and lower

mountain ecosystems, which are the habitat of unique species -- many

of which have yet to be studied. With emigration, farming, ranching

and logging activities have seen a decline. But the landscape has

changed also as a result of the money the emigrants send home to their

families here: showy new homes made from more expensive materials like

concrete, and a growing number of large trucks with U.S. license

plates -- the most prized object among young people, say local

residents. The latest data on population density -- 25 inhabitants per

square kilometre -- is from 2000 and does not include the flood of

emigration of young people in recent years. Those who have stayed use

little firewood, and their main source of energy is propane from small

tanks. But there are several garbage dumps in different municipalities

that are overflowing. The local authorities assure that by the end of

the year there will be several sanitary landfills ready for operation,

and that 70 percent of plastic and cardboard will be collected for

recycling. " Those who remain in Sierra Gorda are that critical mass

who get by here (with the remittances sent by relatives abroad),

reforesting, collecting carbon and protecting watersheds. For others,

it is not an option faced with the craze of becoming 'gringos', " says

Martha Ruiz, director of the reserve, referring to the nickname given

to Mexico's neighbours to the north. " This going to the United States

weighs heavily on my soul because of the loss of identity, but I

completely recognise that has allowed us to restore the reserve, " she

adds in an interview for this report.

http://latinamericanow.blogspot.com/2007/06/emigration-blessing-for-biosphere.ht\

ml

 

Trinidad and Tobago:

 

22) Slash and burn farming and other reckless activities caused most

of the major forest fires which occurred during the recent dry season.

The result, according to local environmentalists, was fast depletion

and serious degradation of Trinidad and Tobago's natural resource.

This has reversed gains made over several years by local NGOs and

personnel on numerous Government-funded programmes, who had

successfully protected and guarded state forests, conserving TT's rich

bio-diversity and wildlife habitat and food chains. ead of POE, Peter

" Barry " Rampersad, took Sunday's Newsday on a tour of the Lopinot

forest to show the effects and ecological damage of the recent fires.

He showed the destruction caused by a farmer who used the slash and

burn method to prepare land for the planting of crops. " Because of

this farmer's careless behaviour this part of the mountain has been

left blackened and bare. This has stripped our critical watershed of

vegetable cover, " Rampersad said. Although the rainy season has begun,

logs could still be seen burning on the hillsides, threatening to

start another fire. " The rain has somewhat dampened the forest floor

but looking underneath it you can still see dry leaves, so even though

rain has fallen, a serious fire could occur, " he explained. Rampersad

pointed to scores of towering pine trees that had been horribly burnt

in a fire he and members of his team fought from five am till

midnight. " It was a big fire and we suppressed it as much as we could

to save them because some of these trees have been here for so many

years, " he said. According to Rampersad, members of POE have fought

approximately 60 fires in the Lopinot Valley. " Approximately 938 acres

of land have been destroyed in areas such as Guadeloupe Valley, La

Resource and Cabargrand hills, " he said.

http://www.newsday.co.tt/features/0,58255.html

 

Jamaica:

 

23) The felling of trees on enormous areas of land - to feed the vast

appetite for charcoal - in Daniel Town, Trelawny, is of great concern

to the Trelawny Gun Club. The purpose of the club, headed by managing

director of Lascelles, and Wray and Nephew, the Honourable William

'Billy' McConnell, is the preservation of wildlife and the

sport-shooting of game birds. As part of the club's Labour Day

project, the members, in collaboration with several residents in the

community and the Long Pond Sugar Estate, planted 400 saplings in the

area, with the hope of reclaiming a fraction of the hundreds of

thousands of trees being axed regularly for coal burning. In the past,

the making of charcoal was limited to a small group of cutters, who

used axes and responded to an internal - and much localised - demand.

In those days, many households used coal for cooking. But, since it

became a lucrative trade, battery-powered chainsaws have taken the

place of axes and are rapidly depleting the woodlands. Chopping down

trees, setting fire to a densely stacked pile of branches and trunks,

and covering it with dirt, so that oxygen is limited, thus making

charcoal, transforms a process that would otherwise take years to

achieve naturally. " The chainsaw is the preferred tool being used, and

not the axe, and this is having a more devastating impact on the

community; the absence of the trees is having an adverse effect on the

climatic conditions in the area, in particular, the rainfall, " stated

McConnell. Checks made with the Jamaican Forestry Department revealed

that the rate of the deforestation in the country is about one per

cent, or 350 hectares per annum. Director of technical services at the

organisation, Alli Morgan, told The Sunday Gleaner that this was bad

for such a small island, but with public awareness in the island's

schools and the private planting programme aimed at encouraging the

planting of trees by residents, he is hoping that the current

situation will be alleviated. Less thantwo per cent of Haiti's

once-lush forests remain, compared with 20 per cent in the Dominican

Republic, with which it shares the island of Hispaniola, research has

shown. As coal burning threatens to denude the hills of Daniel Town

and its environs, McConnell and his members said they would continue

to educate the people through public campaigns.

http://www.jamaica-gleaner.com/gleaner/20070603/lead/lead2.html

 

Honduras:

 

24) BRUS LAGUNA, Honduras – Traffickers of illegal wood overpower and

outspend the government while damaging Honduran forests, according to

Spanish-language newspaper El Diario-La Prensa. Ranger Snyder Paisano,

35, a Miskito Indian, and other indigenous leaders say that in the

last four years they have watched helplessly the growth of mahogany

poachers and drug traffickers. The intruders destroy the forests of

Central America, considered a World Heritage Site by the United

Nations and where more than 40,000 indigenous people live. Honduran

President Jose Manuel Zelaya dispatched 100 troops to the Rio Platano

Biosphere Reserve last year to slow the traffickers. He has spent $5.3

million in the last two years in the effort to fight wood trafficking,

according to an advisor to the president. But indigenous leaders say

the government's presence is insufficient. Paisano and other

indigenous leaders tried unsuccessfully to meet President Zelaya

recently when he visited their community to inaugurate a canal.

Prosecutors from the Ministry of the Environment say they lack

resources to investigate traffickers, especially considering the

threats posed by the violent, technologically advanced poachers.

http://news.newamericamedia.org/news/view_article.html?article_id=bfa4eba452e207\

814268fc517e5d

a1a2 & from=rss

 

Caribbean Islands:

 

25) The original frogs that successfully colonized the Caribbean

islands likely hitched a ride on floating mats of vegetation called

flotsam, which is the method typically used by land animals to travel

across salt water. " Some rafts of flotsam, if they are washed out of

rivers during storms and caught in ocean currents, can be more than a

mile across and could include plants that trap fresh water and insect

food for frogs, " Hedges said. It is not likely that the frog species

dispersed simply by swimming because frogs dry easily and are not very

tolerant of salt water. In addition to the study's discoveries about

Caribbean and Central American frogs, the research also revealed and

defined an unusually large and unpredicted group of species in South

America. " The South American group may have more than 400 species and

is mostly associated with the large Andes mountains of South America, "

Hedges said. " Until now, the entire group of these terrestrial,

tropical frog species -- the eleutherodactylines -- have been

considered a " black hole " in frog biology because of the poor

understanding of their evolutionary history, " explained Hedges.

Scientists consider the knowledge of evolutionary relationships, also

called " phylogeny, " to be fundamental to many fields of biology,

including medicine, anatomy, physiology, ecology, and conservation.

This research was supported by the National Science Foundation's

Biotic Surveys and Inventories Program, Systematic Biology Program,

and Assembling the Tree of Life (AToL) Program. The latter program is

an effort to understand the " tree of life, " or the relationships among

all organisms. http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2007/06/070606235308.htm

 

South America:

 

26) A bid to curb logging of South and Central American cedar trees,

the source of some of the world's most valuable timber, failed on

Thursday at a United Nations wildlife meeting. Germany, acting on

behalf of the European Union, withdrew a proposal requesting the

Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES)

regulate trade in cedar, after strong opposition from central and

south American countries. The EU and conservationists have argued the

cedar, used in the building trade and to make furniture and musical

instruments, needs protection due to a significant depletion in

numbers resulting from too much logging, some of it illegal. But

Mexico and south American countries, where cedar is a lucrative

business, said there was not enough evidence to suggest the trees were

in danger and more data was needed. " In this situation after getting

this clear message from the range states, the EU feels that there is

no point to put the proposal to vote, " said the delegate, representing

Germany at the CITES June 3-15 meeting in The Hague. The Spanish cedar

or cedrela, which has been harvested for at least 250 years, is

esteemed for its aromatic and pink-tinged timber which is resistant to

insects and rots. The EU had sought to have cedar listed on CITES

Appendix II that regulates international trade in animal and plant

species.

http://www.iol.co.za/index.php?set_id=1 & click_id=31 & art_id=nw20070607174548901C5\

26218

 

Peru:

 

27) Sign on to this sign on letter: I am writing to express my concern

for the protection of the rainforest and indigenous peoples of the

Tahuamanu region of Madre de Dios, Peru. Illegal logging of mahogany

and other timber species in Peru is taking a tremendous toll on the

rainforest and on indigenous people living in voluntary isolation.

Effective controls on this illegal trade are still lacking, despite

continued evidence of illegal logging, and repeated requests from

indigenous communities in Peru. International trade is driving this

illicit activity: more than 90 percent of the mahogany from Peru is

exported to the United States. As many independent investigations have

shown, the official documentation accompanying much of this wood is

obtained by false or fraudulent means. We urge your government to halt

this illegal trade by prohibiting timber exports without independent

third-party verification of their legal origin.

http://www.nrdconline.org/campaign/biogems_tahuamanu_0407

 

Brazil:

 

28) PORTO VELHO — The eternal tension between Brazil's need for

economic growth and the damage that can cause to the environment are

nowhere more visible than here in this corner of the western Amazon

region. More than one-quarter of this rugged frontier state, Rondônia,

has been deforested, the highest rate in the Amazon. Over the years,

ranchers, miners and loggers have routinely invaded nature reserves

and Indian reservations. Now a proposal to build an $11 billion

hydroelectric project here on a river that may have the world's most

diverse fish stocks has set off a new controversy. How that dispute is

resolved, advocates on both sides say, could determine nothing less

than Brazil's vision of its future at a moment when it is

simultaneously facing energy and environmental pressures and casting

envious glances at faster-growing developing countries, like India and

China. Unhappy with Brazil's anemic rate of growth, President Luiz

Inácio Lula da Silva has made the economy the top priority of his

second term, which began in January. Large public works projects,

including the dams here on the Madeira River, are envisioned as one of

the best ways to stimulate growth. " Who dumped this catfish in my

lap? " was the president's irate complaint when he learned recently

that the government's environmental agency had refused to license the

dam projects, according to Brazilian news reports. But the proposal is

far from dead, and continues to have Mr. da Silva's support.

Additional environmental impact studies are under way, but the dispute

now raging in Rondônia appears to have more to do with politics and

economics than science and nature. " My impression is that some

environmental groups see the authorization of construction as opening

the door to unrestricted entry to the Amazon, " said Antônio Alves da

Silva Marrocos, a leader of the Pro-Dam Committee, financed by

business groups and the state government. " But if they are able to

block this, " he added, " then every other Amazon hydroelectric energy

project is doomed as well. " http://www.irn.org/support

 

29) Deforestation rates fell by 89 percent in the Brazilian Amazon

state of Mato Grosso for April 2007 compared with April 2006,

according to the System Alert for Deforestation, an innovative

deforestation monitoring program backed from Brazilian NGO Imazon with

support from the Moore Foundation, USAID, the David and Lucile Packard

Foundation and Avina. Mato Grosso, which has suffered some of the

highest rates of deforestation of any state in the Brazilian Amazon,

lost 2,268 square kilometers of forest between August 2006 and April

2007, a decline of 62 percent from the year earlier period when 5,968

square kilometers were cleared. Imazon says it is likely that

deforestation for the August 2006-July 2007, the dry season when large

areas are typically burned, will likely be lower than last year's

6,086 square kilometers.

http://news.mongabay.com/2007/0608-mato_grosso.html

 

 

30) Google is working with an indigenous tribe deep in the Amazon

rainforest to protect their native lands from illegal encroachment,

reports the San Francisco Chronicle.

For the first time, Google has confirmed details of the project. " The

Amazon rain forest and its indigenous peoples are disappearing

rapidly, which has serious consequences both locally and globally, "

Google Earth spokeswoman Megan Quinn told the San Francisco Chronicle.

" This project can raise global awareness of the Surui people's

struggle to preserve their land and culture by reaching more than 200

million Google Earth users around the world. " Working in conjuction

with the Amazon Conservation Team, Google Earth's technology is being

used to monitor illegal mining and logging that threaten the lands of

the Surui tribe in Brazil. Google is working with satellite providers

to significantly improve image resolution in some of the most remote

parts of the Amazon basin. " Google Earth is used primarily for

vigilance. Indians log on to Google Earth and study images, inch by

inch, looking to see where new gold mines are popping up or where

invasions are occurring, " he continued. " With the newly updated,

high-resolution images of the region, they can see river discoloration

which could be the product of sedimentation and pollution from a

nearby mine. They are able to use these images to find the smallest

gold mine. " http://news.mongabay.com/2007/0610-google.html

 

Ecuador:

 

31) Yasuni National Park – 2.5 million acres in the Ecuadorian Amazon

– is home to some of the world's most diverse communities of birds,

amphibians, insects, and trees. There are nearly as many species of

trees in a single hectare (2.5 acres) of the Yasuni as in the entire

United States and Canada combined. But it's also home to some of

Ecuador's largest untapped oil fields. A friend of mine is pouring his

heart and soul into efforts to save this biodiversity hotspot; he is

currently preparing to return to Ecuador to battle it out on the

ground in the coming months. While other countries have been

compensated for leaving forests undeveloped, this is the first

situation where a country has considered leaving oil in the ground, in

turn leaving the forest alone, if it is partially compensated. I hope

that this gets more media coverage soon. While Yasuni National Park is

technically protected right now, I learned that it is only really

protected until further notice, as many areas of Ecuador that were

once protected had their status changed in order to make room for oil

companies.

http://globalclimatechange.wordpress.com/2007/06/07/ecuador-invites-world-to-sav\

e-its-forests/

 

Indonesia:

 

32) As a self-confessed city slicker too dependent on her mod-cons, I

was intrigued by the idea of spending the night in a treehouse at the

Permai Rainforest Resort in Damai Beach, Santubong, Sarawak.

Originally set up as an Outward Bound School in 1990, the resort lies

on 18ha, close to the popular Damai Beach and the legendary Mt

Santubong about 35km south of Kuching. The drive down is in itself a

treat for the senses! You cannot help but stare at the expansive

greens, dotted with the vibrant colours of local flora and makeshift

stalls selling iced drinks, fresh coconuts and fish. The view ahead is

dominated by the majestic Mt Santubong, which starts off as a tiny

anthill in the distance and rapidly dominates the skyline as you

approach Damai Beach. Santubong is not only beautiful but also full of

history. Local legend tells the tale of two sisters, Puteri Santubong

and Puteri Sejinjang, who died after a bitter feud and turned into the

two mountains – Mt Santubong and Mt Sejinjang. At a certain angle, Mt

Santubong resembles the profile of a lady lying on her side. British

explorer Sir Alfred Wallace made an expedition to Santubong in 1854

and it is his findings that are the basis of Darwin's theory of

evolution.

http://thestar.com.my/lifestyle/story.asp?file=/2007/6/9/lifetravel/17465203 & sec\

=lifetravel

 

33) The Community Forest Program (HKM), which bears the motto " people

prosper with preserved forests " , began in 2000 and has since involved

more than 6,500 rural families living near preserved and commercial

forests in West Lampung regency. The residents are committed to the

conservation and revival of the forests, which are in a critical

condition due to illegal logging. In barren areas they have planted

fast-yielding shrubs that produce cooking spices, medium-yielding

crops like cacao and coffee, and long-yielding plants like palm and

durian. A 12,000-hectare preserved area in Tangkit Tebak, which was

previously barren, has been transformed into a green space and now

provides a source of income for the farmers. Under the program, the

community organized a forest conservation group, which has been

entrusted to manage the preservation of the forests for five years. A

team consisting of village heads, natural resource operators,

environmentalists, forest authorities and farming groups will

supervise and evaluate the group's performance annually. " Members of

the group are permitted to operate farms in and around the forest, but

they are not allowed to build homes. The group is somewhat relieved as

West Lampung Regent Erwin Nizar has issued lease-rights licenses,

which are valid for 25 years, " said executive director of the Watala

environmental group, Rama Zakaria. The farmers must pass four stages

to obtain the licenses -- form a group; establish a work area; issue

regulations and work-group plans; and complete a license application.

Each group consists of about 50 farmers and works a different plot of

land. The groups have the right to manage the land, but not to sell

it. Licenses are revoked if a group fails an annual monitoring and

evaluation, does not uphold conservation efforts or violates the

regulations. http://forests.org/articles/reader.asp?linkid=77580

 

34) Communities based in and around forestlands will be supervised

under a cooperative to ensure they are no longer exploited by local

mafia groups, who task villagers with cutting trees without informing

them that the activity is illegal. To prevent this, Telapak has

launched the " From Illegal Logging to Community Logging " program,

which will promote forestland conservation and the participation of

local communities. " Community logging can be defined as forest

management in woods and forest reserves and constitutes an

environmental service. It is conducted in accordance with any

government regulation under the Forestry Ministry. Therefore, it is

legal, " Telapak chairman Ambrosius Ruwindrijarto said Thursday at a

ceremony marking the agreement with IPB. Community logging can take

any one of the many forms allowed by forestry laws and other

regulations such as under social, community and tribal forestry

schemes. The community logging pilot program has already proven

successful in South Konawea, Southeast Sulawesi, where 8,000 illegal

loggers have become community loggers under a cooperative. " I believe

that this program can eliminate illegal logging 100 percent, "

Ruwindrijarto said optimistically. Didik Suharjito, forestry

management department head at IPB, said Indonesia requires the

contribution of local communities to manage its forests. " That is why

IPB wants to build a strong foundation that will enable communities to

manage forests well, " Didik said, adding that the institute would send

academicians and students to aid local communities.

http://www.thejakartapost.com/detailnational.asp?fileid=20070609.H06 & irec=5

 

35) The new governor of Indonesia's tsunami-ravaged Aceh province

declared a moratorium on logging Wednesday as part of efforts to

develop a new long-term forest management strategy. Irwandi Yusuf said

all logging would be banned indefinitely. Aceh's decades-long

separatist insurgency meant logging was limited to rebels and rogue

elements within the military. But a recent peace deal opened up

previously inaccessible virgin forests. And with nearly 130,000 homes

destroyed by the 2004 tsunami, demand for timber has been almost

insatiable. Some international and local aid organizations have even

been accused of buying illegal logs. " This is part of our long-term

plan to come up with a durable and fair forestry management plan,''

said Yusuf, adding he hoped the move would minimize natural disasters.

It was not immediately clear what penalties violators face.

Environmental groups say Indonesia, with the world's third-largest

tropical forest reserves behind the Amazon and the Congo basin, loses

more than 2 million hectares of trees every year. Aceh, on the

northern tip of Sumatra island, loses an equivalent of two soccer

fields of forest daily, or 20 hectares (49 acres), according to the

local environmental group WALHI.

http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/6/6/apworld/20070606214007 & sec=a\

pworld

Australia:

 

36) The Wilderness Society is taking the Federal Government and Gunns

Ltd to court to challenge the approval process for the pulp mill in

Tasmania. We have not taken this step lightly. We have done it because

we believe the Federal Government is not abiding by its own

environment laws. The process to approve the pulp mill has been

perverted by the Tasmanian and Federal Governments and contributions

from dozens of experts critical of the pulp mill's impacts on the

environment are being ignored. You can help by making a tax-deductible

donation today. Your donation will help as we pull together a

well-resourced legal team and continue our campaign to protect

Tasmania's old-growth forests.

http://www.wilderness.org.au/campaigns/forests/tasmania/gunns_proposed_pulp_mill\

/pulp-mill-leg

al-challenge/?nid=20

 

37) A RETIRED farmer and a conservationist have been honored for their

respective battles against salinity and old-growth logging in Western

Australia. Beth Schultz, 71, has been appointed an Officer of the

Order of Australia (AO) for her service to conservation and the

environment, for helping ensure the protection of old growth forests

in WA's south-west in 2001. Dr Schultz, who began campaigning for

forest protection in 1975, has served as the Conservation Council of

WA's president from 1992 to 1995 and vice-president from 1995 until

now. She describes herself as a conservative for whom the battle to

save forests is not yet over because companies continue to source

native timber for industrial use. " I'm about as conservative as they

come, " Dr Schultz said. " I don't think anyone would ever mistake me

for a tree-hugging feral. " Former Jerramungup farmer George Edmondson

has been recognised in the Queen's Birthday Honours for his landcare

efforts, encouraging fellow farmers to adopt sustainable agricultural

systems. Mr Edmondson, also appointed an Officer of the Order of

Australia (AO), was the inaugural chairman of the Jerramungup Land

Conservation District Committee in 1982 and has been active on several

state and national landcare related committees ever since. He said

every farmer was now aware of their landcare obligations. " Some

practise the efforts better than others but all farmers are keen to

practise landcare in some way, shape or form, " Mr Edmondson said. Mr

Edmondson said climate change was the last thing farmers were thinking

about in 1982 when he embarked on his landcare efforts. Farmers now

recognised mistakes made when they were obliged to clear their land

under commonwealth government policy, he said. " We awoke a sleeping

giant in dryland salinity when we cleared the land. " Younger farmers

pick up sustainability much faster, " he said. " They quickly understand

the damage that we had done in the past. "

http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,20867,21884582-1702,00.html

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

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

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

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

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

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

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...