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Today for you 34 new articles about earth's trees! (235th edition)

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earthtreenews-

Weblog: http://olyecology.livejournal.com .

 

--British Columbia: 1) Forest economy

--Washington: 2) Clearcutting park to make airport more safe

--Oregon: 3) ski expansion shut down, 4) New wood economy, 5)

Sustainable forestry?

--California: 6) Bill for Air resources board to help protect trees,

7) Bristlecone Pine,

--UK: 8) Trees as movie stars

--Finland: 9) Elk eating tree farmer's trees

--Ethiopia: 10) Sustainable Starbucks is good at sustaining genocide

--Tanzania: 11) Nou forest sustains 200,000 people

--Uganda: 12) Bombing gets people to plant trees for protection, 13)

Chimps,Brazil

--Brazil: 13) What's wrong with FSC?

--Guyana: 14) if destruction pays and conservation doesn't…

--Chile: 15) 2.17 million hectares now biosphere preserve

--Uruguay: 16) 4 pulp mills set to destroy whole country

--India: 17) local involvement important, 18) stopping timber thieves,

19) Ayurvedic cultivation suffers from defrorestation, 20) Scandal in

Kerala Assembly,

--China: 21) # 1 criminal in the business of illegal logging, 22)

Magic tree worshiped,

--Burma: 23) Protest revolve around corrupt logging practices

--Cambodia: 24) Pursat province officials stealing logs

--Philippines: 25) Children of the forest make mini forests

--Malaysia: 26) Samling shut down to protect Penan, 27) Fines increased,

--Indonesia: 28) Forest Carbon Protection Facility

--Australia: 29) pulp baron scam, 30) Save Moira forest, 31) Save Karri forests,

--World-wide: 32) International Day Against Monoculture, 33)

Extincition count, 34) FSC GE tree fraud,

 

British Columbia:

 

 

1) British Columbia's economy was built on forestry, and while over

the last 150 years the province's economy has become more diversified,

forestry remains a key economic driver. Forestry is responsible for 15

per cent of the province's economic activity and directly employs

about 80,000 British Columbians. Outside the Lower Mainland, forestry

remains the largest or second-largest source of income for 77 per cent

of B.C. communities. At around $14 billion per year, forestry accounts

for about 40 per cent of the province's exports. British Columbia

remains one of the world's leading exporters of forest products,

including pulp and paper. In 2003, we introduced the Forestry

Revitalization Act – the most significant update to forest policy in

over 50 years. The changes were aimed at revitalizing the industry by

allowing businesses to operate more competitively, and by opening up

the door for greater diversification by new entrants and First

Nations. Now, 49 communities have new or expanded community forest

opportunities. Forestry is not without its challenges, which currently

include a strong Canadian dollar, increased competition from low-cost

jurisdictions and a slumping U.S. housing market. But, history has

shown B.C.'s forestry's industry is resilient and can overcome the

cyclical nature of the business. http://www.gov.bc.ca

 

 

Washington:

 

2) So far, about 250 trees of a total of 350 trees have been felled.

Cutting began the first week of September. During the park closure,

temporary traffic barriers will be set up. The tree-clearing effort is

part of a three-year project initiated by the Port of Port Angeles to

remove trees from the approaches to William R. Fairchild International

Airport, which is west of the park.The trees are being removed to

comply with Federal Aviation Administration guidelines for runway

glide slopes. The city of Port Angeles, which owns the park, will sell

the trees for an estimated $50,000. An initial survey by the port

identified 200 trees for removal. The 200 were located in the west

part of Lincoln Park near the former campground. A follow-up survey by

the city identified an additional 150 trees that were deemed diseased

or dangerous, and that could be removed to create additional

recreational space at the park. Those 150 trees were closer to

Lauridsen Boulevard. Under FAA regulations, trees and any other

obstructions must be removed from an area 10,000 feet beyond the end

of the airport's main runway and 5,000 feet beyond the end of the

alternate north-south runway.

http://www.peninsuladailynews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070922/NEWS/70922\

001

 

Oregon:

 

3) The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled against the U.S. Forest

Service in a lawsuit that challenged the merits of an expansion

project to the Mt. Ashland Ski Area. The three-judge panel federal

appeals court for the western United States ruled that the Forest

Service " failed to properly evaluate " the impact the project would

have on the Pacific fisher, a rare mink-like animal that lives in the

Siskiyou Mountains, and didn't " appropriately designate " riparian

reserves in the expansion area. " The MASA (Mount Ashland Ski Area)

expansion would result in eliminating habitat that may be vital to

preservation of the fisher population in the project area, " the court

wrote in its decision filed Monday morning. " Similarly, until the

Riparian Reserves and Restricted Watershed lands are properly

classified and subjected to additional scrutiny required by these

classifications, the possibility of environmental harm to the

ecological health of the region's waterways remains. " The Mt. Ashland

Association sent out a press release this afternoon that stated

members of the board of directors and staff " will review the court

decision with its legal counsel to determine its next course of

action. " Ashland City Councilor Eric Navickas, who was a party to the

lawsuit as an individual before the case was appealed to the Ninth

Circuit, said, " I'm pretty ecstatic. We expected this after sitting

through the court hearing but it feels a lot better to have a decision

from the court. It really shows what a waste of time that whole

process has been. Hopefully Mt. Ashland will accept that it lost and

stop dumping money into this. " He said if the expansion plans are, in

fact, over, he will end his ten-year boycott of the Mt. Ashland slopes

and go skiing this winter.

http://www.mailtribune.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070925/NEWS/709250308

 

4) In 2006, 32,320 Oregonians worked in lumber and wood products

manufacturing, compared to 64,764 in 1986 — a loss of more than 50

percent in 20 years, despite the state's population doubling during

the same time. " For sure, the percentage that manufacturing makes up

of the total economy has declined, " said Steve Williams, the Oregon

Employment Department's regional economist for Central Oregon.

Statewide, manufacturing has been growing as an industry. In the

Portland area, for example, new companies produce semiconductors and

microchips. In Crook County, on the other hand, wood products still

constitute about 90 percent of all manufacturing jobs. In the last 10

years, manufacturing jobs in Oregon have grown by about 15 percent,

Williams said. But the rest of the economy has grown by about 60

percent. So manufacturing is a smaller component of the overall

economy than it was 10 years ago. Not everyone displaced by the

changing economy has adopted careers as different as Gervais. Bob

Otteni, of La Pine, for example, is still working in forestry. Sort

of. To change with the times, he started a tree care company that

transfers his forestry skills to the service industry. Otteni had a

reforestation company in Eugene that came to Central Oregon in 1980 on

a contract with the logging and mill company Brooks-Scanlon. Then he

started winning local contracts with the U.S. Forest Service. After

trees were cut down for timber, Otteni and his crew came through an

area and replanted trees. In the winter, his crew helped thin

overgrown stands of trees to allow the remaining trees to grow bigger

faster. " We had enough work to stay busy year-round, " Otteni said. " We

got up to where we had probably 40 or so employees during the (peak)

season. " By the late 1980s, Otteni had bought some wood processing

machinery. He ran a post and pole mill in the La Pine Industrial Park

and a mechanized thinning operation, too. " You had to be changing all

the time; it was such a dynamic industry, " he said. " You always had to

be looking at where the industry was going. I saw it as a cyclical

thing, with waves that would rise and fall. And you had to sort of

position yourself so that you could ride the crest of the wave coming

up and get off before (it crashed) because most of these cycles would

end. "

http://www.bendbulletin.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20070923/BIZ0102/70923035\

6/1001 & nav_cate

gory=

 

5) We hear praise for sustainable forestry from the timber industry,

politicians, and even among many environmental groups. While

sustainability is an admirable goal, most of what I have seen touted

as sustainable practices are far from ecologically sustainable,

especially when compared to wild landscapes. In nearly all instances

that I have observed, the so called " sustainable " logging, grazing,

farming-- fill in the blank-- is only sustainable by externalizing

most of the real costs (ecological impacts) of production. That

doesn't prevent people from trying to claim that they have achieved

the Holy Grail and found a way to exploit nature and protect it too.

Everyone wants to think they can take from nature and somehow not have

to pay the full cost. It's the free lunch syndrome. Sustainable

forestry as practiced today is usually more of an economic definition

than an ecological one. By sustainable, timber companies and their

supporters in the " sustainable forestry " movement engage in practices

that ensure a continual long term timber supply, not a sustainable

forest. A couple of weeks ago I toured a highly ballyhooed sustainable

forestry site in California. The company whose property we viewed was

certified by the Forest Stewardship Council as a sustainable forestry

wood producer. Certification by FSC permits a company to sell its wood

for a premium and supposedly gives consumers reassurance that the wood

they are buying is environmentally benign or may even enhance

ecosystem function. The company land was, by the standards of the

industry, well managed. They did no clearcutting. They left buffers

along streams. They didn't cut any remaining patches of old growth. In

short, they were a model timber operation. Their land still had trees,

but did it still have a forest? For many the mere presence of trees is

taken as proof that logging on the site was sustainable. But a

continuous supply of trees for the mill doesn't necessarily mean you

are preserving or sustaining a forest ecosystem. The company owners

and foresters who led the tour were proud of their efforts. I don't

want to denigrate their practices, which, on the whole, were much

better than those followed by other timber companies. But that doesn't

mean their logging practices were perpetuating a forest ecosystem.

http://www.newwest.net/topic/article/is_sustainable_forestry_sustainable/C38/L38\

/#comments

 

California:

 

6) Under AB 32, the Air Resources Board is charged with leading

California's efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions to 1990

levels. A small but important component of this is expanding and

financially crediting the role that forests -- and forestry -- can

play in capturing and storing carbon dioxide. The ARB is scheduled to

adopt the existing but flawed forestry protocols at its October

meeting. If it takes this action, it will please " cut no tree "

environmental types but greatly diminish the true potential for

California forestry to help in achieving the goals of AB 32 by playing

a vigorous role in the emerging marketplace for carbon credits. What's

wrong with the current protocols? Nothing, if you're managing forest

property as a park. Because environmentalists don't like forestry, the

protocols are skewed to reward landowners who grow trees but don't

harvest them. They have nothing to offer to traditional forestry

interests who are in the business of planting, growing and cutting

trees. http://www.sacbee.com/110/story/392606.html

 

7) Scattered on a remote mountainside of eastern California, these

gnarled, twisted specimens are the oldest living organisms on Earth,

the most senior among them some 4,700 years old. If the mere sight of

trees that pre-date the ancient Pyramids of Giza is not enough to take

the breath away, the hour-long trek to reach them is: these natural

wonders are found at a rarified altitude of 3,300 meters. The

bristlecone's astounding durability is partly explained by the harsh

climate that they have endured throughout the ages, according to Patti

Wells, a US Forest Service naturalist, who has studied the trees for

37 years. In the summer, the trees bask in temperatures of 25 degrees

Celsius, but in winter they are frozen in bone-chilling sub-zero

temperatures that can reach minus 30 degrees. Roaring winds of 320 kph

(200 mph) pummel the forest, which is also blanketed in snow up to

three meters deep. Only the bristlecone is able to withstand such

extreme conditions, botanists say. The reasons are partly to do with

the tree's unique make-up and unforgiving location. Because the trees

grow slowly, they have developed an impervious resinous wood,

protecting them from insect infestations and mushrooms. The high

altitude of the forest also means that potentially devastating fires

in the region don't have as much oxygen to feed them, Wells said. At

first glance bristlecone pines often appear to be dead. As the tree

ages outer layers of bark die, leaving only a strip of connective

tissue stretching from the roots to the few branches that remain

alive. The deadwood of " Pinus Longevae " is so solid that it does not

rot. http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5jbqPkeCraj9vmMDWjweCt0A6fKow

 

UK:

 

8) The most striking piece of trivia about the Queen beech, a gnarled,

knotted old tree in an ancient Hertfordshire woodland, is that it was

once a character in a Harry Potter film. The landmark at Frithsden

Beeches, just outside London, took a turn as the sometimes violent

Whomping Willow in The Prisoner of Azkaban. You can see why the

film-makers were struck by it: it looks good for a 350-year-old. Regal

limbs creep out from its centre; it has the grandeur of a seen-it-all

veteran that has lived since before the Great Fire of London, and

taken in plenty more besides. If one could pick the ideal companion

with which to encounter this majestic and spooky scene, it would

surely be Richard Mabey. Softly-spoken, intense and erudite, he is one

of the " wild bunch " of lyrical writers currently riding a wave of

interest in man's relationship with the landscape. His drinking

buddies include Crow Country scribe Mark Cocker and Cambridge

University don Robert Macfarlane, author of the recent hit The Wild

Places. Among his peers, Mabey's name is uttered with a hushed

reverence. In the world of the green-fingered literary gurus, he is

king. The beech is Mabey's favourite tree. He spent much of his

childhood playing in the beech woods of the Chilterns, and once owned

a beech wood himself. He admires the tree's amazing ability to respond

to catastrophe. Today, beech woods criss-cross southern England, from

Burnham Beeches to the New Forest and the Chilterns. Unlike the

high-profile oak, Mabey calls beeches the " workhorses of the forest " .

They provide firewood and furniture, and epitomise nature's capacity

to respond to change. They also play host to many organisms, from

hawks in their branches to toadstools on the ground. The Wild Wood in

The Wind in the Willows is, inevitably, a beech wood. All this is

chronicled in Mabey's eagerly-awaited new book, Beechcombings, the

Narratives of Trees. Released next month, it describes the beech's

characteristics, habitat and mythology, and explores what we, as

humans, can learn from the world of trees.

http://environment.independent.co.uk/wildlife/article2991254.ece

 

Finland:

 

9) " Yes, it really does get us pretty steamed up that each winter the

elk come round and browse on the saplings. We've planted each and

every one of them. Now they are around 150 centimetres high, and the

elk are simply gobbling them up " , complains Piisilä. Roughly 30 per

cent of the saplings on the piece of land have been badly damaged by

the four-legged visitors. One method used to keep the elk away was

pieces of soap hung on the saplings. It didn't work. And there seems

to be no guarantee that the spraying is going to be any more

effective. " We have so far come to the decision that we will not be

planting any more seedlings " , adds Piisilä. A total of 795 elk were

shot last autumn in the municipality of Salla (which admittedly does

cover an area of nearly 6,000 square kilometres). Five years ago the

number was around 400. What happens when the crown of a small pine

gets nibbled by a browsing elk is that a new crown springs up

alongside it, causing the tree to grow crooked. In addition, the

presence of herds of heavy-hoofed elk trampling through the sapling

stands in the winter leaves a good many of them flattened. In the

winter, young pine trees are the main diet of elk passing through the

area. The damage done to the young trees does not kill them, but it

does put a severe blight on their future value as sawn timber: the

affected trees are good only for cellulose pulp production, where the

return for the owner is appreciably less than if the trees were to go

as logs.

http://www.hs.fi/english/article/Forest-owners+fighting+a+losing+battle+against+\

hungry+elk+/113

5230568156

 

Ethiopia:

 

10) Tucked inside a fancy black box, the $26-a-pound Starbucks Black

Apron Exclusives coffee promised to be more than just another bag of

beans. Not only was the premium coffee from a remote plantation in

Ethiopia " rare, exotic, cherished, " according to Starbucks

advertising, it was grown in ways that were good for the environment

-- and for local people, too. Companies routinely boast about what

they're doing for the planet, in part because guilt-ridden consumers

expect as much -- and are willing to pay extra for it. But, in this

case, Starbucks' eco-friendly sales pitch does not begin to reflect

the complex story of coffee in East Africa. Inside the front flap of

Starbucks' box are African arabica beans grown on a plantation in a

threatened mountain rain forest. Behind the lofty phrases on the back

label are coffee workers who make less than a dollar a day and a

dispute between plantation officials and neighboring tribal people,

who accuse the plantation of using their ancestral land and

jeopardizing their way of life. " We used to hunt and fish in there,

and also we used to have honeybee hives in trees, " one tribal member,

Mikael Yatola, said through a translator. " But now we can't do that.

.... When we were told to remove our beehives from there, we felt deep

sorrow, deep sadness. " No coffee company claims to do more for the

environment and Third World farmers than Starbucks either. In

full-page ads in the New York Times, in brochures and on its Web page,

Starbucks says that it pays premium prices for premium beans, protects

tropical forests and enhances the lives of farmers by building

schools, clinics and other projects.In places, Starbucks delivers on

those promises, certainly more so than other multinational coffee

companies. In parts of Latin America, for instance, its work has

helped improve water quality, educate children and protect

biodiversity. Inside many Starbucks outlets across America, the

African décor is hard to miss. There are photographs and watercolors

of quaint coffee-growing scenes from Ethiopia to Tanzania to Zimbabwe.

Yet such images clash with the reality of African life. Since 1990,

Ethiopia's population has jumped from 52 million to about 80 million:

two new Los Angeleses. The more people, the less there is to go

around. Ethiopia's per capita annual income is only $180, one of the

lowest on Earth. The environment is hurting, too, as coffee and tea

plantations -- as well as peasant farmers -- spread into once wild

areas, raising concern about the demise of one of the country's

natural treasures: its biologically rich southwestern rain forest.

http://www.sacbee.com/101/story/393917.html

 

Tanzania:

 

11) Tanzania's Nou forest, in the Manyara region of the country's

temperate north-east, provides livelihood for over 200,000 people.

They depend on it for food, water and a valued raw material - raffia,

from the Raffia Palm (Raphia). Raffia is part of daily life in the

forest, where an abundant water supply and fertile soils provide

favourable growing conditions. The versatile palm has multiple uses:

raffia culms (stems) are commonly used as supporting beams in

buildings and the leaves make effective roof covering. There is also a

long-standing tradition of raffia use in textiles - baskets, mats,

hats and rope can be woven from the flexible fronds. These goods were

produced primarily for use within the villages, but are now sold

locally and abroad, generating much-needed income. Previously the

situation was very different when a combination of rapid population

growth and the need for productive agricultural land devastated large

areas of the forest. In particular, unrestrained grazing, illegal

logging and uncontrolled forest fires contributed to soil erosion,

silting of the rivers and destruction of the area's biodiversity.

Over-harvesting and unsustainable methods of collecting raffia also

contributed to the destruction of parts of the state-owned forest,

threatening the village's water supplies and depleting most of the

raffia. Faced with a potential environmental catastrophe, the

Tanzanian government banned the collection of raffia from the forest.

With the help of two NGOs, the ban has been revoked and forest

communities are now weaving their way to a brighter future.

FARM-Africa Tanzania and SOS Sahel Ethiopia established the Nou Joint

Forest Management (JFM) project, a participatory forest management

(PFM) scheme, bringing villagers and the government together to manage

the forest sustainably.

http://africanagriculture.blogspot.com/2007/09/tanzanian-region-learns-sustainab\

le.html

 

 

Uganda:

 

12) Bridget Andrio, who left Moyo while still a baby, recently

returned after eight years to a whole new world of beautiful mother

nature, different from what she was used to in Kampala. On arrival,

Andrio fell in love with the trees, preferring to spend most of her

time under the mango, neem and orange trees. Bridget is one of the

people, who on visiting Moyo town, cannot resist appreciating the

beautiful tall green trees in many homes. Fifteen years ago, Moyo was

a dusty town, where all hopes of returning to normalcy were thwarted

by the dry winds which echoed the approach of the Sahara Desert.

However, all hopes dwindled with the incessant bombing raids by the

Sudanese Air force. The name antonov became an abomination as at the

sound of a plane, people would scamper out of their houses to take

cover in the nearest ditches or under trees. When five people,

including three of the same family were killed in a bombing raid near

Moyo Technical Institute in 1993, President Yoweri Museveni visited

the site and advised residents to plant trees to reduce the impact of

the missiles. The result was instantaneous. People rushed to plant

mangoes, guavas, oranges and cashew nuts in their compounds. Teak

trees, commonly known as tikka, were used to demarcate land as neem

trees were planted for medicine. No technology could save the

residents as the antonovs flew beyond the range of UPDF anti-aircraft

missiles. The only choice was to plant trees.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200709240241.html

 

12) Today's post is a lot more somber compared to last weeks, however

the topic I am about to discuss is one that has been weighing on my

mind a lot over the past week. I feel this is an important issue to

discuss. Hopefully this post will give you all an idea of the

situation the chimps and many other wildlife here are facing. The

chimps that live in the forest around our site are living in a forest

that has been heavily logged, and until just the past week I had no

idea how heavily logged their territory really was. For the past week,

Alex, Kennedy and I have not been able to find the chimps. While we

have been hearing many vocalizations from them, and often very close

by, we have been unsuccessful at actually seeing them. Sometimes their

calls sound like they are directly beside us, unfortunately, since

they are not fully habituated, as we move closer they also move, but

farther away from us, making it impossible to actually capture a

glimpse of them. This situation has been somewhat discouraging, but so

goes field work…you have good days and bad days and some weeks are

harder than others. I'm just thankful that I get to spend every day in

the forest! Anyway, back to our issue at hand, logging. Alex, Kennedy

and I have been walking through the forest a lot more over the past

week in our search for the chimps, therefore becoming more familiar

with the terrain and territory of our group. I have come to realize

that their entire forest is actually many small patches of forest

connected by grasslands and logged areas. Yesterday we came across 13

different logged sites, and 5 of these were all within several hundred

meters of each other. If logging continues at the rate it has been,

the forest will soon become smaller and smaller patches and the

grasslands in between will widen, making it not only difficult, but

also dangerous for the chimps to move among the forest patches.

http://andreadurcik.blogspot.com/2007/09/sad-state-of-things.html

 

Brazil:

 

13) Jurua Forestal was first certified for FSC by the California-based

Scientific Certification Systems Inc in April 2002. At the time of the

certification, Jurua held 25,000 hectares of rainforest in the

Brazilian state of Para, but was reported by SCS to be exploiting

2,000 hectares per year. The company was therefore known at the time

of FSC certification to the operating on the shockingly unsustainable

logging 'cycle' of 12.5 years. Even SCS were forced to note that " this

farm will only have enough wood to supply the sawmill alone for a

period of 10 to 15 years. JURUÁ is aware that it must find other areas

to supply the sawmill so that it can maintain the 30-year harvest

cycle on this area " . SCS nevertheless proceeded to issue the

certificate, and there has been no report subsequently that Jurua has

obtained other areas of forest - not that this would make much

difference to the 'sustainability' of what has already happened. A

further major flaw in the certification was whether the forest should

or shouldn't have been classified as 'High Conservation Value Forest'.

SCS reported that the area consisted of a patchwork of diverse lowland

rainforest types on different soils. A study was also conducted into

the primate diversity of the forest, revealing that no fewer than

seven primate species were present. Despite this, SCS decided not to

classify the area as HCVF, which would have led to tighter

certification requirements. SCS did, however, insist on no fewer than

23 'conditions' for the issuance of the certificate, along with 14

'recommendations' (a full copy of SCS's Public Summary Certification

report, which also includes the results of subsequent annual audits,

is available for download below). But although SCS were evidently

aware of the multiple problems with Jurua Forestal's operation from

the outset, they nevertheless failed to use the standard FSC practice

of defining Major or Minor 'Corrective Action Requests' for the

company, which would enable FSC to keep a close check on whether Jurua

was dealing with any issues which might conflict with their

certification status.

http://www.fsc-watch.org/archives/2007/09/22/SCS_certification_of_Jurua_Forestal\

__Brazil__FSC_

plumbs_new_depths_of_bad_practice

Guyana:

 

14) Senior Economist at CI Dr Richard Rice, who brought the concept to

Guyana, said that the problem that conservationists face is that " if

destruction pays and conservation doesn't, " then the first will always

win over the latter Conservation International (CI) Guyana since

establishing the Upper Essequibo Conservation Concession (UECC) five

years ago has reported strong partnerships with communities nearby and

announced plans to seek an extension of the concession. Celebrating

the fifth year anniversary at Cara Lodge on Friday night were Prime

Minister Samuel Hinds, other government officials, members from CI

Washington office and non-governmental organizations. On July 17,

2002, Conservation International signed a 30-year lease with the

Guyana Forestry Commission for the management of the Upper Essequibo

Conservation Concession - an area of approximately 200,000 acres of

pristine rainforests in a watershed area within the forestry zone in

the upper Essequibo River. According to Manager Eustace Alexander of

Conservation Science at CI Guyana, within the next five years CI plans

to implement new initiatives to leverage new sources of funding and

petition the government for geographic expansion of the present

conservation concession. They also plan to ask for the inclusion of

the site into the legally protected area when the National Protected

Areas System becomes enacted. In addition, CI also intends to explore

a greater variety of

partnership arrangements, particularly with Guyana's private sector and

multinational developmental agencies. Already a corporate sponsor is

on board with the concession - Save Your World Corporation which makes

personal care products in the United States. Save Your World President

Scott Cecil was present to mark the

five-year anniversary. The communities closest to the site are Apoteri

(50 miles away); Rewa (70 miles away) and CrashWater (100 miles away).

These communities are dependent upon the forest and its resources for

their livelihoods, noted Alexander, since the communities " would like

to secure their forests from the perils of development (e.g. logging)

and still achieve socio-economic development. "

http://guyanaforestryblog.blogspot.com/2007/09/ci-to-seek-bigger-essequibo.html

 

Chile:

 

15) The United Nations Educational Scientific and Cultural

Organization (UNESCO) officially incorporated more than 2.17 million

hectares of Chilean temperate rainforest - along with 22 other sites

around the world - into the World Network of Biosphere Reserves. The

move was made official at a meeting at the organization's Man and the

Biosphere Program (MAB) Bureau in Paris last week. The area, now known

as the " Southern Andes Temperate Rainforest Biosphere Reserve, " spans

the area from the northern border of Chile's Region X south along the

Argentine border through to the Futaleufú National Reserve. " More than

1.5 million hectares of temperate rainforest are in this area, " said

Luis Cárdenas, director of the region's National Forestry Service

(CONAF). The area is also known for its high mountain ecosystem and

invaluable water resources. Conservation International has previously

recognized this area as a conservation " hotspot " , while The World

Wildlife Fund (WWF) and The World Resources Institute have classified

it as a Global 200 eco-region that should be preserved for its unique

contribution to global biodiversity. In fact, according to Antonio

Lara - director of the Núcleo Milenio Forescos of Chile's Universidad

Austral - of the species that inhabit the temperate rainforests of

South America, 35 percent of the trees and shrubs, 23 percent of

reptiles, 30 percent of birds, 33 percent of mammals, 50 percent of

fish, and 76 percent of amphibians are unique to this area. The new

reserve is home to many of Chile's most emblematic species, such as

the alerce and araucaria trees - among the oldest trees in the world -

as well as the monito del monte ( " little forest monkey " ), the huemul,

the pudú (the world's smallest deer), and the Magellanic woodpecker

(second largest in the world). All of these species are endemic to

these forests. According to MAB, Biosphere Reserves are areas that

promote solutions to " reconcile the conservation of biodiversity with

its sustainable use demonstrating integrated management of land, water

and biodiversity. " They are nominated by their governments and remain

under national jurisdiction, though they are internationally

recognized.

http://www.tcgnews.com/santiagotimes/index.php?nav=story & story_id=14735 & topic_id\

=1

 

Uruguay:

 

16) The Botnia Orion plant originally from Finland and which demanded

an investment in the range of 1.5 billion US dollars is undergoing

trials and is scheduled to begin production in the coming weeks in

spite of the Argentine government and pickets' ongoing opposition. A

second pulp mill is to be built by Spain's ENCE, along the coast of

the River Plate. Originally to be placed a few kilometers from

Botnia-Orion on the river Uruguay, the plant was relocated following

strong pressure from Argentina, but also for logistic reasons and a

clean up process inside the company. Partly owned by the Spanish

government Ence, according to the current Socialist administration,

had too many cronies from the previous Conservative administration who

committed several money loosing mistakes while waiting to be removed.

Another project belongs to Sweden's Stora-Enso and is planned to be

built in the center of Uruguay along the Rio Negro, a waterway which

cuts the country in half (East/west) and is already dammed in three

locations generating an average 30% of the electricity consumed in

Uruguay. Finally during the recent visit of Uruguayan president Tabare

Vazquez to Brussels, Spain and Portugal, the Lisbon seated company

Portucel announced its interest in constructing a paper and pulp plant

in Uruguay, somewhere in the east of the country and involving an

investment in the range of one billion US dollars. The four projects

underline the pro business atmosphere in Uruguay plus the natural

conditions for such undertakings: abundance of water, trees and

rainfall. However, in the last twenty years Uruguay promoted forestry

as an option for the poorest soils and now an estimated 800.000

hectares have been planted mostly with eucalyptus (80%) and the rest

coniferous. An ideal input for the pulp industry.According to industry

sources Uruguay still has room for another 500.000 hectares of

forests, which if completed would mean 9% of the country's 16 million

hectares of land will be dedicated to the new option for the country's

economy. With a GDP in the range of 18 to 20 billion US dollars, four

investments of such magnitude anticipate a significant change for the

country's economy and development possibilities.

http://www.mercopress.com/vernoticia.do?id=11438 & formato=HTML

 

India:

 

17) The Principal Secretary to the Government, Department of Forest

and Ecology, Abhijit Dasgupta, has said that a sustainable management

of forests would remain incomplete without the active participation of

local people. Mr. Dasgupta was delivering the presidential address at

the inaugural session of a two-day conference of forest researchers

and scientists working in southern States on " present research

activities and future vision " here on Tuesday. In the past, the word

management was synonymous with exploitation. With the passage of time,

the term had come to denote regeneration of forests with sound

techniques and technological support. Enhancing biomass production was

vital in that context, he said. The research programmes should be

evolved to meet the changing management objectives. This would enable

researchers face the new challenges, including the data demands of the

forest management effectively, he said. The departmental research

wings in a majority of the States had been focussing mainly on

" adaptive research agenda " such as regeneration technique, provenance

trial, nursery techniques and plantation management. A huge

information gap between the forest management and forestry research

had not been addressed, Mr. Singh said. Minister for Forest and

Ecology C. Chennigappa said the State forests had a repository of over

4,500 species of flowering plants, 600 species of birds, 800 species

of fishes, 160 species of reptiles, 180 species of mammals and 70

species of amphibians.

http://www.hindu.com/2007/09/19/stories/2007091953910400.htm

 

18) Governor Rameshwar Thakur has said that all the departments,

including the police, in the southern States should be involved in

establishing an effective coordinating machinery for checking the loot

of forest wealth and trade in wild animals. Mr. Thakur was speaking

after inaugurating a two-day conference of Forest Ministers of

southern States here on Thursday. Stating that the efforts of people

who had preserved and protected the forest wealth for thousands of

years should not be allowed to go waste, Mr. Thakur suggested that the

States should immediately make concerted efforts to arrest all kinds

of illegal activity. Minister for Forests, Environment and Ecology, C.

Chennigappa, said that protecting the flora and fauna in the forests

would be difficult without well defined and effective coordination

among the States concerned. A conference of this nature should provide

a permanent forum for regular interaction among all States in

conceiving and enforcing effective forest protection management

strategies, he said. Tamil Nadu Minister for Forests, N. Selvaraj,

said that areas on the inter-State border were vulnerable to illegal

activities. The situation called for cooperation and coordination

among the States concerned. The common problems were encroachments,

ganja cultivation and smuggling of timber and forest wealth.

http://www.hindu.com/2007/09/21/stories/2007092154370400.htm

 

19) VISAKHAPATNAM: A Chintaluru-based Ayurvedic firm (West Godavari)

which cultivates rare medicinal plants in 20,000 acres in Orissa,

Rampachodavaram and Maredumilli (East Godavari) and parts of Nalgonda

district is finding it difficult to ensure continuous supply of raw

materials with the depletion of reserve forests in the region. The

disappearance of medicinal plants have also affected the herbal

medicine industry. According to the Ayurvedic firm managing director D

V Srirama Murthy, the shortage of raw material has necessitated

cultivation of herbal plants on a large scale to meet the industry

needs besides conserving medicinal plants. The company has entered

into a contract with a 100 percent 'buy back' guarantee to the

farmers. The ayurvedic company produces medicines for arthritis,

asthma, diabetes and thyroid deficiencies. The 800-year-old

hospital-cum-production unit has millions of customers abroad.

http://www.newindpress.com/NewsItems.asp?ID=IEA20070924011907 & Page=A & Headline=De\

pletion+of+fore

sts+hits+Ayurvedic+firm & Title=Southern+News+-+Andhra+Pradesh & Topic=0

 

20) Thiruvananthapuram: The Opposition walked out of the Kerala

Assembly yesterday after the Speaker disallowed their demand for an

adjournment motion over the alleged felling of trees in a plantation.

The new scandal has hit the government of the Communist Party of India

Marxist (CPM)-led Left Democratic Front at a time when it is already

facing a series of allegations over controversial land deals leading

to the resignation of a minister and demand for another's exit. The

Congress-led opposition United Democratic Front raised the issue of

alleged felling of trees in the Harrison Plantation estate in

violation of rules and suggesting the involvement of the Forest

department Forest Minister Binoy Viswom. On the heels of the exit of

Public Works Minister T.U. Kuruvilla over a land scandal, the

opposition has been demanding Viswom's expulsion from the ministry

over his alleged role in the controversial sale of a portion of the

Merchiston Estate in Ponmudi near here to the Indian Space Research

Organisation (ISRO).

http://archive.gulfnews.com/articles/07/09/19/10154671.html

 

China:

 

21) China is already the largest importer of illegally logged timber

in the world: an estimated 50 percent of its timber imports are

reportedly illegal. Illegal logging is especially damaging to the

environment because it often targets rare old-growth forests,

endangers biodiversity, and ignores sustainable forestry practices. In

2006, the government of Cambodia, for example, ignored its own laws

and awarded China's Wuzhishan LS Group a 99-year concession that was

20 times as large as the size permitted by Cambodian law. The

company's practices, including the spraying of large amounts of

herbicides, have prompted repeated protests by local Cambodians.

According to the international NGO Global Witness, Chinese companies

have destroyed large parts of the forests along the Chinese-Myanmar

border and are now moving deeper into Myanmar's forests in their

search for timber. In many instances, illicit logging activity takes

place with the active support of corrupt local officials. Central

government officials in Myanmar and Indonesia, countries where China's

loggers are active, have protested such arrangements to Beijing, but

relief has been limited. These activities, along with those of Chinese

mining and energy companies, raise serious environmental concerns for

many local populations in the developing world.

http://www.foreignaffairs.org/20070901faessay86503/elizabeth-c-economy/the-great\

-leap-backward.h

tml?mode=print

 

22) SINGAPORE - Buddha sat for years under one to find enlightenment,

and scientist Isaac Newton had his epiphany in another's shade. But

for many Singaporeans, trees are useful for a more prosaic quest --

lucky lottery numbers. The discovery of two " monkey heads " poking out

of the bark of an otherwise non-descript African Mahogany tree have

sparked a minor craze in the southeast Asian state, as devotees seek

numbers from what they believe to be a god living in the tree.

Bananas, peanuts and peaches have been left as offerings to please the

monkey god, sacred in Chinese mythology and Hinduism. A wheel-like

device which kneeling gamblers turn by hand in front of the tree to

spit out numbered balls has helped fuel the mania. " Most people come

for lottery numbers " , explained Madam Kang, who had traveled half way

across the island to join a crowd of a hundred onlookers milling

around the tree on a weekend afternoon. " There were three car

accidents by the tree but no one was hurt, so people believe it was

the monkey god protecting them. " Not long after the monkey god

reportedly aided a series of wins, another three trees bearing gnarls

that resemble gods were discovered along the same -- now jammed --

road. http://www.reuters.com/article/lifestyleMolt/idUSSP16732320070924

 

Burma:

 

23) The protests in Rangoon are taking place against a backdrop of

systematic abuse of Burma's natural resources, writes Andrew Wasley

The Burmese junta, responsible for the brutal crackdown on recent

protests against the authorities' decision to hike fuel prices at a

time of worsening economic conditions, is bankrolling its regime by

exploiting the country's vast natural resources at the expense of the

Burmese people and environment. Oil, gas, gold and timber - amongst

other commodities - are being ruthlessly sought out for extraction,

sale and export abroad, often with the help of complicit foreign

companies. According to campaigners, the trade in these natural

resources has been linked to serious human rights and environmental

abuses, including killings, forced labour, deforestation, pollution,

land grabbing and compulsory relocation. The trade in Burmese timber

has been particularly responsible, say pressure groups, for a

disturbing number of violations and, in some cases, accused of being

directly to blame for perpetuating armed conflicts and insurgency

inside the country. Much of the timber coming out of Burma is being

exported to China and other Asian manufacturing hubs before finding

its way onto the high streets of Europe and beyond. Campaigners argue

that despite large profits being made by the Burmese junta, and timber

suppliers, manufacturers and retailers, little or none of this wealth

is filtering back to the Burmese people. They are calling on companies

and governments to cease doing business with the Burmese regime to

help severe the revenue gained from these unsustainable trades.

Advocacy group Global Witness, which first raised the alarm about the

role played by timber in perpetuating conflict - the group highlighted

in 1995 how the Khmer Rouge were trading timber to fund its murderous

regime in Cambodia - argues that the continued logging of Burmese

forests jepoardises any chance of peace or sustainable development in

the country. NHG Timber Ltd, based in Sanderstead, Surrey, offers

Burmese hardwood for sale as planks, boards and logs; marine

specialists Hawke House, based in Gosport, Hampshire, uses Burmese

teak for decking destined for use in the manufacturer of luxury

yachts; and the Oxfordshire-based Timbnet retails sawn teak amongst

other hardwoods. Pressure groups say that furniture made from Burmese

teak is frequently found for sale in both specialist and high street

stories.

http://www.indexonline.org/en/news/articles/2007/3/burma-the-environmental-pilla\

ge.shtml

 

Cambodia:

 

24) Officials claiming to be in charge of protecting the forests of

remote Pursat province have been stealing logs from independent

harvesters and selling them to private merchants, an official report

and villagers say. Men claiming to be from a forestry protection

agency stole logs from residents of Battambang province who had come

to Pursat to cut down trees, according to a report issued by the

Cambodian People's Party in Battambang. Meas Soeum, a CPP commune

council member in Mong Russei town, Battambang province, said

villagers complained to him they had been robbed of logs they were

hired to cut. The thieves sold all the wood from carts, but returned

the cattle hauling those carts to the villagers, Meas Soeum said. " As

for the carts, they sold them too, " he said. It was unclear whether

the villagers were illegally cutting the trees themselves. The alleged

thefts underscore the nature of forest depletion in Cambodia, which

occurs when common people cut trees for household use or to be sold

alongside the road as charcoal, or when illegal companies cut away

large swaths of forest.Villagers said the logs may have been taken by

people pretending to be from a forest protection organization, or from

the government itself. " Actually, there are many problems, because the

forestry administration officials are also corrupt, " one villager

said, speaking on condition on anonymity. " They are supposed to

control the logging, but instead they seize them from the people and

sell them. "

http://ki-media.blogspot.com/2007/09/pursat-big-thief-stealing-from-smaller.html

 

Philippines:

 

25) Eight-year-old Ramon Madrid has never set foot in a real forest.

Nor has he felt cool winds in a mountain setting or seen streams

gurgling with pristine waters. The sound of birds chirping and the

sight of butterflies fluttering are scenes he hears -- and sees --

only on television, the movies or in books. Ramon lives in a

condominium located in another jungle, one made of concrete and steel.

That is why " Tsikiting Gubat (Children of the Forest), " an

environmental project which aims to teach children the importance of

having nature in their immediate surroundings, was recently launched.

" It is never too young to start teaching children how to plant trees

and care for the environment, " environmentalist Odette Alcantara,

founder of the Mother Earth Foundation, told the Philippine Daily

Inquirer (parent company of INQUIRER.net) during the project launching

at her house in Quezon City. A dozen children showed up for the event

where each of them was given a 5-month-old seedling of a fire tree.

Children as young as 3 years old were accompanied by parents who were

more than happy to see their offsprings become environmentalists at

such a young age. The aim of the activity, said Odette -- " Lola O " to

her colleagues -- is to create " mini forests " in the city by planting

as many trees as possible in available spaces. For starters, the kids

were told to plant the seedlings in their own backyard.

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/breakingnews/metro/view_article.php?article_id=9029\

1

 

Malaysia:

 

26) The Malaysian authorities have told timber giant Samling that the

company will lose its licence to log on the land of the nomadic Penan,

stars of tonight's BBC television show 'Tribe', unless it resolves its

long-running conflict with the tribe. 'The Penan have no rights to the

forest', said Samling executive James Ho in an interview recently

broadcast on Swiss television. For more than 20 years the nomadic

Penan of Sarawak have blockaded roads to stop loggers destroying their

forest home. Their blockades have been repeatedly destroyed by police.

The latest blockade was mounted in August to prevent a Samling

subcontractor from entering the forest. Police destroyed a blockade in

another area in June, only to see the local Penan erect another in

July. Samling was awarded a certificate for 'sustainable' logging of

the Penan's land in 2005, sparking immediate protests by the tribe.

The Penan of Long Benali community recently refused a 'gift' of water

pipes from the company, whose logging activities have polluted their

drinking water. Survival's director Stephen Corry said today, 'For too

long the Malaysian government has taken the side of the logging

companies against the Penan, in contravention of its own laws. Let's

hope that its warning to Samling is serious and that no further

logging takes place against the Penan's wishes.' Malaysian and

international law states that the Penan have rights to their land, and

must be consulted before logging takes place. Malaysia also voted in

favour of the UN Declaration on Indigenous Peoples, approved by the

General Assembly on 13 September.

http://www.survival-international.org/news/2506

 

27) Sabah has increased the fine against those convicted of having

stolen timber by ten-fold. The state has followed the step taken by

Sarawak in providing a fine of up to RM500,000 for those found in

possession of illegally-felled logs. The state assembly passed an

amendment to the Forestry Enactment on Monday. Assistant Minister to

the Chief Minister, Datuk Nasrun Datu Mansor, who tabled the motion,

said the previous penalty of RM50,000 was not enough to deter those

involved in illegal logging activities. He said of the 281 illegal

cases in Sabah between 2001 and August this year, 16 of those

convicted faced the maximum fine of RM50,000. However, he said, the

value of the logs involved was far greater than the penalty imposed.

Chief Minister Datuk Musa Aman has also directed the Forestry

Department to suspend sawmills found to be keeping illegal logs. " The

Government has to be more stern in its actions and in driving home the

message that we will not let off these irresponsible people, " said

Musa, adding that the effectiveness of this penalty would be monitored

and tightened further, if necessary. Independent assemblyman for Kuala

Penyu, Datuk John Ghani called for illegal loggers to be slapped with

fines of up to RM5mil, saying that even a revised maximum penalty of

RM500,000 may not be enough to deter them as it would only mean " a few

logs " to the culprits. Tan Sri Joseph Kurup (BN – Sook) said there had

been instances of offenders being tipped off ahead of raids against

them. " Illegal loggers are getting creative. There are reports of them

setting up sawmills in the middle of the jungle so that their illegal

harvests could be taken out undetected, " he added. Recalling that

Sabah once possessed large tracts of forests, he lamented that illegal

loggers had since stripped much of this wealth.

http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2007/9/24/nation/20070924164455 & sec=n\

ation

 

 

Indonesia:

 

28) The president of the World Bank, Robert Zoellick, will announce

the Forest Carbon Protection Facility after climate change talks with

world leaders, including the Indonesian President, Susilo Bambang

Yudhoyono, in New York today. The World Bank believes its $400 million

fund will expand into a multibillion-dollar program to preserve

forests and reduce global warning. More than 20 per cent of greenhouse

gases result from deforestation. Pilot projects for the fund are to be

detailed at the pivotal December climate change conference in Bali,

which is to outline a successor to the Kyoto Protocol. World Bank

sources believe the fund can be a central feature of a new agreement

to combat global warming. Governments, forestry companies and local

communities would be eligible for compensation for agreeing to abandon

logging or protect forests. Under the Kyoto Protocol, a carbon credits

scheme of financial incentives excludes forest protection. Only

replanting is eligible for assistance. The facility would establish a

carbon credit market to help companies meet their emissions targets by

paying developing countries to halt logging. Large energy firms

operating coal-fired power stations - a major source of greenhouse

emissions - are understood to have expressed interest in the facility.

The existing carbon credit market is worth billions. The value of

forest protection payouts under the new fund could rise to between $7

billion and $18 billion a year, according to estimates in the Stern

report on climate change. Dr Yudhoyono and Mr Zoellick will issue a

statement supporting the facility today. Indonesia is likely to become

the first pilot project for logging compensation. With Indonesia

hosting the December climate change conference, Dr Yudhoyono is

attempting to ensure deforestation is addressed. The conference is

expected to endorse testing the forest protection facility for

inclusion in an agreement to replace the Kyoto Protocol on its expiry

in 2012. Indonesia is the world's third-largest contributor to

greenhouse gas emissions because of rampant forest-clearing.

http://www.smh.com.au/news/environment/foresters-paid-to-stop-logging/2007/09/24\

/1190486225992.

html#

 

 

Australia:

 

29) Primary Industries Minister Ian Macdonald says the forests

department has been charging the South East Fibre Exports company up

to $16 a tonne for logs taken from the Eden agreement area, which

covers forests from near Cobargo to the Victorian border. Logs from

north of Cobargo are paid for at the rate of just under $7 a tonne.

The Minister's spokesman, Bill Frew, says it is a fair return. " The

whole aim with forestry is to get a return from all products of the

forest, " he said. " We don't want to leave marketable wood lying around

in the forests and the pulp wood which is produced is a by-product of

the sawlog recovery operation and so if we can sell that it all

contributes to the bottom line and the overall return that ultimately

the whole of NSW gets from the forest. " However, anti-logging groups

say their court action forced the State Government to reveal the sale

price of pulp logs to the Eden chipmill. Harriett Swift from the

Chipstop group says the Department of Primary Industries initially

refused a freedom of information request for the information, but this

decision was overturned on appeal. She says that price is scandalous.

" The prices are lower than they were 10 years ago which is pretty

disgusting and compared to plantation prices for equivalent wood is

one seventh for what Gunns or Great Southern plantations would pay, "

she said. " They're just under-pricing it to a degree that it's quite

scandalous and it's no wonder they wouldn't release the information

before, they find it quite embarrassing. "

http://www.abc.net.au/news/stories/2007/09/24/2041639.htm

 

30) Environmentalists are trying to stop red gum logging in a forest

on the New South Wales side of the Murray River today. The New South

Wales Red Gum Forest Action Group is protesting against logging in the

Moira State Forest, which is the subject of a case in the state's Land

and Environment Court. The group's Naomi Hodgeson says the 20

protesters plan to prevent logging until environmental studies are

carried out. " There's an activist suspended from a tree that's

connected by a cable to the logging machinery so the machinery can't

move while we're here and we're going to remain here until we get a

commitment from the New South Wales Government that the compartments

that are subject to the court case aren't going to be logged in the

meantime, " she said.

http://www.abc.net.au/rural/news/content/2007/s2041657.htm

 

 

31) A third of the State's plant species face extinction and

South-West karri forests could be reduced to small pockets even if

international climate change targets are met, experts have warned.

University of WA school of earth and geographical sciences researcher

Ray Wills said the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change had

recommended a 60 per cent reduction in greenhouse emissions in the

hope that global warming could be limited to just 2C, but many SW

species would not survive even that rise. " The majority of species on

the planet live in less than a three-degree temperature band so if we

increase the temperature by three degrees we put all those species at

risk, " he said. " Eucalypts and close to two-thirds of vegetation and

species in the SW live in a close to two-degree temperature band. In

the recent history of the planet we've never warmed above the

temperatures we're at now during the past 40 to 50 million years and

most of the species on the planet have evolved in the past 25 million

years in the kind of temperatures we live in or lower, but not

higher. " National Climate Centre figures show the annual mean

temperature for WA has increased by a little more than 0.8C since

1910. Species of banksia, which Dr Wills called the " canary in the

coalmine " have already begun dying on a large scale in the Mid-West.

" With two degrees of warming my view is for the most part there

probably won't be any banksias left in the wild, " he said. " They live

in a rainfall zone between 500mm and 900mm and if it falls below that

we lose them and it will affect eucalypts which grow in that band as

well. Certainly up to 3000 species could be at risk with a twodegree

temperature increase and we're talking about any species with less

than a 300km range — which is most of the species we know in WA. "

http://exitstageright.wordpress.com/2007/09/22/karri-forests-native-plants-face-\

extinction-clim

ate-experts-say/

 

World-wide:

 

32) In 2004, September 21st was declared as International Day Against

Monoculture Tree Plantations by a number of organizations throughout

the world. On this day, people in every continent carry out actions to

generate awareness on the impacts of large scale tree monocultures on

local communities and their environments. Be they eucalyptus, pines,

acacias, gmelinas, oil palm or other types of monoculture tree

plantations, they are all mostly aimed at feeding northern consumers

with growing volumes of raw materials extracted in southern countries

at a huge social and environmental cost. Wasteful consumption patterns

in the north are displacing food production in countries where

malnutrition and hunger are already a major problem for millions of

people. Market-based export policies are leading to decreased food

sovereignty in food producing countries. Local communities are

displaced to give way to endless rows of identical trees that displace

most life forms in the area. Water resources are depleted and polluted

by the plantations while soils become degraded. Human rights

violations are rife, ranging from the loss of livelihoods and

displacement to repression and even cases of torture and death. While

communities suffer as a whole, plantations result in differentiated

gender impacts, where women are the most impacted. New threats are

emerging that could increase even further the area occupied by these

" green deserts " , as well as their social and environmental impacts.

The looming disaster of climate change has resulted in the promotion

of " solutions " that not only do not solve the problem but that create

yet more suffering for local communities. So- called " carbon sink

plantations " (carbon dumps), so-called " green fuels " (agrofuels) and

so-called " improved trees " (genetically engineered) are examples of

such " solutions " . The millions of hectares of land already occupied by

pulpwood, timber and oil palm plantations could be dwarfed by yet more

millions of hectares that are now being targeted for fast wood

plantations to absorb the carbon emitted by the use of fossil fuels,

for oil palm plantations to produce biodiesel for feeding cars, for

frankentrees to absorb more carbon than natural trees or for producing

ethanol for energy consumption. None of this is science fiction: it is

already happening. We must stop it. But the only way for achieving

this aim is to increase our support to communities that are in the

frontline in the struggle against plantations and to force governments

to change course. On this day we call on the peoples of the world, and

particularly on northern citizens to join in and help to make things

change http://www.globaljusticeecology.org

 

33) There are now 41,415 species on the IUCN Red List and 16,306 of

them are threatened with extinction, up from 16,118 last year. The

total number of extinct species has reached 785 and a further 65 are

only found in captivity or in cultivation. One in four mammals, one in

eight birds, one third of all amphibians and 70% of the world's

assessed plants on the 2007 IUCN Red List are in jeopardy.

http://www.countdown2010.net/china/extinction-crisis-escalates-red-list-shows-ap\

es-corals-vult

ures-dolphins-all-in-danger

 

34) Three years ago, in response to an article I wrote about the pulp

industry's involvement in research into genetically modified (GM)

trees,[1] I received an email from the FSC Secretariat in Oaxaca,

Mexico. " I assume you are aware, " read the email, " that the only

forest certification scheme that has a clear position against GM trees

is the FSC scheme, and that this issue is particularly relevant to

large plantation companies that have the resources to invest in this

kind of research and development. " Without FSC, the email continued,

activists opposing the development of GM trees would be " left looking

for some other practical way of heading off the use of GM trees. " But

does FSC really have " a clear position against GM trees " ?[2] Criterion

6.8 of FSC's Principles and Criteria is clear: " Use of genetically

modified organisms shall be prohibited. " Strictly interpreted this

would mean that a company carrying out laboratory research into GM

trees (and/or financing such research) should not be certified under

the FSC system, because that would involve the use of genetically

modified organisms. But rather than upholding this clear position on

GM trees, FSC's policies and standards weaken Criterion 6.8.[3] In

June 1999, FSC's General Assembly approved a motion to complete an FSC

Policy on GMOs. " This policy should address among other things the

Precautionary Principle. A draft of such clarification and policy

should be submitted to the membership for review and comment within 6

months, " the motion stated.[4] In 2000, FSC duly produced an

" Interpretation on GMOs " , which states that " The use of GMOs is

prohibited in certified forests, and would normally constitute a major

failure of Principle 6. " [5] But the Interpretation does not exclude GM

trees planted by the company outside the area to be certified. And why

does the word " normally " appear? Under what circumstances could the

use of GMOs not constitute a major failure of Principle 6? FSC's

" Interpretation on GMOs " was approved by FSC's Board in May 2000. Yet

the interpretation includes the following statement: " This draft has

been prepared by secretariat staff. It does not have official status

as an FSC position. . . . Please send your comments to the

secretariat. "

http://chrislang.org/2007/09/25/clear-as-mud-fscs-position-on-gm-trees/

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