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Today for you 35 new articles about earth's trees! (242nd edition)

Subscribe / send blank email to:

earthtreenews-

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

 

--British Columbia: 1) Secret Caribou extinction plan, 2) Ancient

Cedar dies, 3) How much forest is left? 4) Judge overrules citizen

clean water needs, 5) Save the upper Pitt,

--Oregon: 6) Neacoxie Creek subdivision, 7) Opal Creek Wilderness, 8)

Five Buttes Timber Sale is irrational, 9) loggers back out of

Scattered Apples,

--California: 10) They NAILed 'em, 11) Probe into FS logging ancient

Sugar pines,

--Montana: 12) Lolo NF road removal,

--Illinois: 13) RAN action at Chicago board of trade

--New York: 14) Black Rock Forest

--USA: 15) Save NFMA from Bush

--Canada: 16) 50-year halt on logging for Caribou

--Armenia: 17) Fast Growing Tree Project

--Ghana: 18) Violent Adansi South District youth selling reserve forest

--Cameroon: 19) Root cause of deforestation is poverty

--Ecuador: 20) Keepers of Eden, 21) 700 open-air toxic waste pits,

--Jamaica: 22) Indiscriminate cutting of trees to be made a criminal offence

--Bolivia: 23) Leader of Bolivia is wise to corruption of globalization

--Peru: 24) First bribe made to the one of the last uncontacted tribes

--Brazil: 25) Amazonian in London opposes conservation efforts, 26)

First sale of carbon offsets, 27) Trees resilient to first few years

of drought, 28) Birds and fragmentation,

--Peru: 29) Communities vote against mine proposal

--Asia: 30) RIP: Dr. C. Chandrasekharan

--India: 31) New Community Reserve in Gaibi Sahib village,

--Myanmar: 32) Horrendous corruption of China ruins Asia's last forests,

--Papua New Guinea: 33) Stop making Palm oil plantations

--Greenpeace: 34) Greenpeacehas set up a forest defenders camp

--Australia: 35) Blockade at Huon Valley road

 

 

British Columbia:

 

1) If you did not like the negotiations that signed away two- thirds

of British Columbia's (BC) Great Bear Rainforest for first time

industrial logging of priceless ancient temperate rainforests, you

will want to know that something even worse is happening in BC,

Canada's Inland Temperate Rainforest, home of the world's only

mountain caribou. These special caribou are totally dependent upon

large areas of intact old-growth forest for their survival. But they

are critically endangered and declining rapidly, with only about 1,800

animals left. The reason is that there has been too much logging and

road building in their habitat... The caribou spend most of the year

at high elevations, but twice each year they must descend to the

valley bottoms to find shelter and food in the lush inland temperate

rainforest. It is critical to their survival. This forest type

contains ancient cedar trees commonly over 500 years old, and a

spectacular array of rare and endangeredlichens and plants. The cedar

trees are storing huge amounts of carbon... The agency is now

conducting backroom negotiations between the timber industry, winter

recreationists and businesses, and environmental groups ForestEthics

and Wildsight... If the past is any guide, the likely outcome will be

unrepresentative,

foundation based environmental organizations compromising away vast

areas of intact ancient temperate rainforest for vague promises that

industrial logging will be " ecosystem

based " or some other such nonsense. Prompt global citizen response is

needed to continue advocating to end ancient forest logging.

http://www.ecoearth.info/alerts/send.asp?id=mountain_caribou

 

 

2) A red cedar tree believed to be almost 1,000 years old and

reputedly the largest of its kind in the world uprooted and toppled

from natural causes in Vancouver's Stanley Park. On Thursday, a part

of the tree's root was exposed and clearly saturated with water and

rotten. The top of the tree lies so deep in the forest it can't be

seen. Eric Meagher, a Stanley Park maintenance supervisor, said a

combination of heavy rain and strong winds on Sunday likely knocked

the towering giant over. " The first photographs we have of it in our

archives are 1890 so people were taking photographs of it way back

then, and that tree at that time was already hundreds and hundreds of

years old, " he said. Before it fell, the mighty tree near Third Beach

was 13 metres around at the base and 40 metres tall. It became famous

after it was featured in a 1978 National Geographic article, with

scores of tourists coming to see it each day. " It's hard to get your

head around the immensity and the enormity of it, " said Campbell

Miller, who was visiting the area from Ottawa. " Sure it's sad when you

lose it, but that's the cycle of life, " Meagher told CBC News

Thursday.

http://www.cbc.ca/canada/british-columbia/story/2007/10/11/bc-cedar.html

 

3) Satellite photos from 2004 show that on Vancouver Island, 73% of

the original, productive old-growth forests have already been logged,

including 90% of the valley-bottoms, 87% of the South Island (south of

Port Alberni), and 99% of the eastern Coastal

Douglas Fir old-growth. In contrast, only 6% of Vancouver Island's

productive forests (old-growth and second-growth) are protected in its

parks. See maps and stats at: http://www.viforest.org The situation is

similarly dire in the Lower Mainland, where over 70% of the old-growth

forests have been logged, which has caused the spotted owl population

to plummet from over 1000 individuals at one time, to 16 individuals

today. As such, the Wilderness Committee is calling for an immediate

end to old-growth logging on eastern and southern Vancouver Island, in

all valley bottoms on Vancouver Island and in the Lower Mainland, and

in all old-growth and mature forest habitat needed for the recovery of

the spotted owl in the Lower Mainland. Across the rest of Vancouver

Island and the Lower Mainland, the Wilderness Committee is calling for

a phase-out of all old-growth logging by 2015, with a full transition

into sustainable second-growth logging. WCWCAction

 

4) Western Forest Products Inc. had been logging within a

48-square-hectare section of block cuts in the watershed, which is

about eight kilometres northeast of Sechelt, when the Sunshine Coast

Regional District grew concerned about possible water contamination.

The district then took the unusual step of forming a local health

board over the summer in order to invoke a rarely tested section of

the provincial Health Act to restrict harvesting trees with the aim of

protecting the community's water supply. Tuesday's ruling by Mr.

Justice Bruce Butler followed a two-day hearing in mid-September. He

stated it " seemed somewhat anomalous " that a B.C. regional district

did not have the authority to determine what can occur with its

watershed, but added that this was not the issue before the court, and

called the stop-work order " unreasonable. "

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20071011.BCWATER11/TPStory/Nati\

onal

Generations of Sunshine Coast residents will suffer centuries of poor

water quality and environmental degradation now that logging of the

Chapman Creek Watershed is underway says a renowned international tree

biologist, who will speak on the subject in Gibsons Oct. 18. " This is

a clear issue of endangering the community and environmental health of

the Sunshine Coast, " says Dr. Reese Halter, who leads Global Forest

Science. " Logging Chapman Creek not only has immediate local

consequences, it has regional and global effects from Global warming

to disease and drought. Already, 65 monitored BC glaciers are

retreating. " According to Halter, at least 118 vertebrates species

live in the old growth of Chapman Creek, of which more than 40 cannot

breed, nest or forage other than in old growth. " Logging this key old

growth watershed is a death sentence to at least 30% of the species in

this area, " says Halter. " An immediate logging moratorium is needed. "

http://www.newswire.ca/en/releases/archive/October2007/10/c2266.html

 

5) Accessible only by boat, the Upper Pitt River Valley, at the north

end of Pitt Lake, has been protected from all the usual development

pressures. Even today, this valley, which falls within the traditional

territory of Katzie First Nation, hosts but a handful of full-time

residents. The lower valley is cradled in the protective embrace of

three provincial parks: Pinecone-Burke, Garibaldi and Golden Ears on

the west, north and east, respectively. All species of Pacific salmon

thrive in the waters of the Upper Pitt River and its tributaries. It

hosts an unusual sockeye population that can live for up to six years

and it is the best place in the Lower Mainland to find ocean-migrating

cutthroat trout. One of the river's tributaries, Boise Creek, supports

a unique hybrid of Dolly Varden and bull trout. Today, the Upper Pitt

provides habitat for the largest remaining population of wild coho

left in the lower Fraser River system. Today, the Upper Pitt River

Valley faces a threat from a large cluster of proposed run-of-river

developments. Such power projects are misleadingly named because, in

fact, they divert 80 to 95 percent of a river's mean annual discharge

into a pipe. The proponents of the hydro project, Run of River Power,

Inc., plan to divert water from every major tributary of the Upper

Pitt River, including Boise Creek where rare hybrid trout reside.

Within a short 12-kilometre stretch of the river, eight pipelines

delivering water to seven powerhouses will generate a total capacity

of 161 MW of electricity. Grizzly bear and other species depend on

wild creek corridors. Logging and dynamiting will be required to build

roads, construct transmission lines, pipelines and powerhouses. Roads

on steep mountain slopes in areas with high rainfall can cause

erosion, landslides and harmful siltation in creeks. And that's not

all that's wrong with this proposal. The proponents want to get the

electricity out of the valley by grabbing a portion of Pinecone-Burke

Provincial Park to construct a transmission / transportation corridor

to the Squamish area. Their proposed corridor along Steve Creek goes

right through a sensitive wetland and grizzly bear habitat. To date,

there is simply no precedent for removing a remote wilderness section

of a provincial park to allow industrial development. If this happens

with Pinecone-Burke, we can expect to see similar proposals to cut up

provincial parks all across BC. Yet the proposal is already moving

forward through the laughable provincial Environmental Assessment

process which has never rejected any industrial project – ever.

http://commonground.ca/iss/195/CG195-StolenRivers.pdf

 

 

Oregon:

 

6) GEARHART - The clatter and buzz of new home construction cuts

through the ocean-side clearing at The Reserve subdivision. But next

door, a blue heron cruises along Neacoxie Creek in peace, the sounds

of its noisy neighbor blocked by gnarly old crab apple trees and

towering Sitka spruce. Here, though new property lines have parceled

much of the land into half-acre lots, a seamless buffer of prairie,

wetlands and forest stands undeveloped on the eastern edge of the

tract, leaving enough natural habitat to keep a much larger ecosystem

intact and giving new homeowners at The Reserve a pristine view of

wildlife at work. The North Coast Land Conservancy, which was

instrumental in The Reserve's eco-friendly design, is working to fold

more of the Neacoxie's neighbors into a habitat enhancement effort

along the creek's 15-mile stretch from Sunset Lake near Camp Rilea to

the Necanicum estuary in Seaside. The swath of land that flanks

Neacoxie Creek as it widens into lakes and narrows down into streams

connects rare coastal prairie lands with diverse wetlands and forests

east of the coastal sand dunes. It also links a growing number of

neighboring landowners in Warrenton, Gearhart and Seaside to habitat

that nurtures elk and deer, a variety of waterfowl and songbirds and

vanishing native species of plants and butterflies. NCLC land steward

Katie Voelke envisions a Neacoxie Wildlife Corridor running through

North Coast neighborhoods much like a road or a municipal waterline.

With small acts of stewardship such as removing the invasive Scotch

broom and planting native lilies or twinberry bushes, she said,

homeowners along the Neacoxie can improve the " green infrastructure "

and watch as birds, elk and deer migrate right through their back

yards. NCLC started studying the flat land off the coast called the

Clatsop Plains when the Oregon silverspot butterfly was first listed

as a threatened species. The butterfly flourishes in vegetation found

on sand dunes and coastal prairies, but development had largely wiped

out its natural habitat. To determine how much habitat was left,

Voelke began walking the land along the Neacoxie and noticed the

diversity of species along forest fringes and wetlands next to the

creek, as well as in the creek itself. " Through that experience, I

realized that what we're looking at is not just a coastal prairie, "

said Voelke. " We're not looking at patches or parcels. We're looking

at an entire ecosystem that's truly a wildlife corridor. "

http://dailyastorian.info/main.asp?SectionID=2 & SubSectionID=398 & ArticleID=45907

 

7) Streams always run crystal clear in the Opal Creek Wilderness. That

clarity is assured because the entire valley watershed -- ridgetop to

ridgetop -- is off limits to human development. Tom Atiyeh: " Right in

front of us is exactly an ancient forest. " Tom Atiyeh is leading this

hike. He's the son of former Oregon governor Vic Atiyeh. Tom Atiyeh:

" You've got western red cedar, there, there. You've got Douglas fir,

next to western hemlock. This is 35,000 acres of old growth. " These

days, Atiyeh directs the Opal Creek Ancient Forest Center. Throughout

the 80's and 90's, it was his family that lead the drive to protect

this land from logging. Tom Atiyeh: " Now we have the responsibility

for stewardship. As a bunch of rabble rousers, we could say, 'We want

it preserved for wilderness!' Well, thanks to Senator Hatfield we got

wilderness. And we go, 'Okay, now that we've got it, what are we going

to do with it?' " Now the activists have turned educators.

http://news.opb.org/article/opal-creek-wilderness-protected-and-ready-visitors/

 

 

8) I have reviewed the Deschutes National Forest Five Buttes Timber

Sale, and feel that the agency is using several flawed assumptions to

justify these sales. Furthermore, their management approach may in

fact enhance fire risk, and at the very least poses potential impacts

on other forest values including loss of spotted owl habitat, scenic

values, loss in woody debris, watershed values, and potential

introduction of weeds. Much of the timber base consists of lodgepole

pine forests. Lodgepole pine is a forest type that burns infrequently

with long intervals between fires and typically has high severity

stand replacement blazes. Stand replacement means that a significant

proportion of trees will die in a fire, however it's important to note

that a mosaic pattern of burned, slightly burned, and unburned forests

is typical for any large blaze--even in a so called " stand replacement

fire " Such blazes are climatic/weather driven by severe drought, high

summer temperatures, low humidity and wind. Fuels are relatively

unimportant under these conditions. This has relevance to the Five

Buttes sale, in part, because the probability of a blaze in any near

term time frame (10-20 years) in these forest types is on average very

low. Furthermore, the FS seems to take the attitude that stand

replacement blazes are somehow undesireable, when in fact, it is the

dominant ecological process in lodgepole pine forests. There is a

growing body of evidence, both anecdotal as well as some recent

research suggesting that fuels reduction projects such as thinning can

INCREASE fire risk. The reasons are tied back to the original

statement about climatic/weather factors that drive big blazes. In

other words, the fire conditions that favor large blazes created by

drought, high summer temperatures, low humidity and wind. Thinning

trees opens the forest to greater solar radiation, thus drying out the

forest, in particular the small fuels that drive fires. Thinning also

opens the forest for wind. Wind is a critical factor in all big

blazes. Another problem with this timber sale is that it proposes to

remove some of the bigger trees. Even if one were to do a thinning

project, you should target the small diameter trees, shrubs, and other

" flashy " fuels that are the prime factors in fire spread and burning

intensity. George Wuerthner, POB 719 Richmond VT 05477

 

 

9) A Southern Oregon logging company that was the high bidder on a

controversial U.S. Bureau of Land Management timber sale is throwing

in the towel on the project. The Glendale-based Swanson Group Inc. has

chosen to withdraw from the Scattered Apples sale near Williams that

it purchased in a BLM auction in 2002. Federal court-ordered mediation

by the agency and plaintiffs resulted in changes that made it no

longer economically viable, said Steve Swanson, president of the

family-owned firm. " As a result of this, the counties lose valuable

timber receipts, the acres that were part of the forest health project

remain unhealthy and we don't have wood to run our mills, " a

frustrated Swanson concluded. " And what you end up with is a small

group of people running our forests, " he added of the plaintiffs. But

Joseph Vaile, campaign coordinator for the Klamath-Siskiyou Wildlands

Center, a conservation group based in Ashland that was among those

taking the BLM to court over the sale, rejects that characterization.

Following the court order in 2004, the BLM, residents of Williams and

KSWC spent months hammering out a solution to the overgrown forest

because of wildfire suppression over the decades, he said. " We came up

with what we thought was the most acceptable way to thin Scattered

Apples, " he said. " It wasn't something everyone was happy with but it

was a good-faith effort to come up with a reasonable solution. We put

a lot of effort into it. " We weren't saying 'no' to the project or to

logging, just to all the old-growth logging that was included in the

original sale, " he added. The mediation chopped 1 million board feet

out of the original 3.7 million-board-foot sale, increased the use of

helicopters in the harvest and protected much of the old-growth.

http://www.mailtribune.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071010/NEWS/710100316

 

California:

 

10) On September 25th, 2007, the California Department of Forestry and

Fire Protection (CAL FIRE) ruled that the San Jose Water Company NTMP

logging plan application is " INELIGIBLE " . The reason for denial? As

NAIL had previously determined and announced at the Public Hearing in

January, SJWC owns too many acres of timberland to meet the legal

definition of a " Non-industrial tree farmer " . The Details: 1) The

Forest Practice Act states that a non-industrial tree farmer must own

less than 2,500 timberland acres. 2) SJWC claimed in their NTMP

application that they own only 2,002 timberland acres. Matt Dias (RPF

of Big Creek Lumber) repeated this number many times to the media. 3)

NAIL determined that SJWC owns at least 2,754 timberland acres, and

likely more, CALFIRE agreed, concluding that SJWC owns approximately

2,825 timberland acres. What does this mean? Not only that the plan

should have been denied, but also that it was never even eligible for

consideration in the first place! We the taxpayers have funded a very

expensive public review process, for two long years, for an

application that did not even meet the basic submission requirements.

http://www.mountainresource.org/nail -

http://losgatosobserver.com/los-gatos/Article.php?id=517 -

http://www.mountainresource.org/node/245

 

11) Three Congressmen, including Rep. John Olver of Massachusetts,

called for a federal probe Wednesday into whether forest managers

illegally cut down more than 200 protected trees in the Giant Sequoia

National Monument and sold some of the wood for timber. The

legislators asked U.S. Department of Agriculture Inspector General

Phyllis K. Fong to investigate the alleged illegal logging of

300-year-old sugar pines and other trees in the monument. The

328,000-acre preserve is part of the Sequoia National Forest in

central California, and is home to two-thirds of the world's largest

trees. No sequoias or redwoods are believed to have been illegally

logged. Conservation groups say the U.S. Forest Service cut the trees

between 2004 and 2005, when the protected area was cordoned off from

public view. The Forest Service claimed it would only log 138 trees

that were at risk of toppling, but conservation groups allege more

than 200 trees were chopped down during that time. " The Sequoia

National Monument is a sacred resource that the Forest Service has an

obligation to protect for future generations, " said Rep. Jim Moran,

D-Va. who signed the letter along with Reps. Maurice Hinchey, D-N.Y.,

and Olver, a Democrat from Amherst. " We need to know if the troubling

allegations raised by local conservation groups are legitimate. "

http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2007/10/10/lawmakers_cal\

l_for_probe_o

f_alleged_logging_of_protected_pines/

 

Montana:

 

12) LOLO HOT SPRINGS - Decades ago, loggers carved hundreds of miles

of road into the forest in the upper reaches of Lolo Creek. Back then,

they called them jammer roads. Built 60 feet apart, loggers kept them

close so they could use draglines to haul timber up steep hillsides.

After the logs were cut and the truckloads of timber hauled,

bulldozers closed down the roads with piles of dirt or imposing holes.

Over the years, many of the roads all but disappeared - covered up by

thick patches of alder and pine. Underneath all that new growth, the

scars never did heal. Like a festering wound, the roads bled silt into

nearby streams with every hard rain, waiting like time bombs for the

next wildfire to strike. " There are sections in upper Lolo Creek where

there are up to 50 miles of jammer road per square mile, " said Lolo

National Forest hydrologist Traci Sylte. " On a map, they look like

spaghetti. " In some places the vegetation is so thick, you can hardly

find them anymore, " she said. They're much easier to find after a

wildfire. The amount of sediment they're capable of producing after

the vegetation is gone can set back trout populations and efforts to

clean up waterways for generations. Starting this week, efforts have

begun to wipe some of the roads right off the map as part of a larger

Lolo National Forest restoration project to improve water quality in

the upper Lolo Creek drainage. On Wednesday, Helena contractor Lance

Stalnaker cranked up his excavator and began work on a two-year

project to permanently close about 100 miles of old jammer and other

overgrown roads. " This restoration work is 99 percent of what we do

anymore, " Stalnaker said. " Forest and mine restoration, stream work -

it's our livelihood. " In some cases, Stalnaker will recontour, scarify

and cover the first 150 feet of the old roadways. In places considered

more sensitive, the experienced contractor will rework the full length

of the road. " It's basically a triage, " Sylte said. " We picked the

roads where we could reduce the long-term impacts the most. ... We are

trying to be as effective as possible in light of the dismal amount of

funding allocated by Congress for this kind of restoration work. "

http://missoulian.com/articles/2007/10/11/news/top/news01.txt

 

Illinois:

 

13) Five protesters were arrested in Chicago today after unfurling a

giant banner on the Chicago Board of Trade accusing Cargill Inc. and

two other agribusiness companies of destroying South American

rainforests. Four protesters, who were apparently from a group called

Rainforest Action Network, climbed the downtown Chicago building to

hoist a 50-foot banner that declared Cargill, Decatur, Ill.-based

Archer Daniels Midland Co. and Bermuda-based Bunge as the " ABC's of

Rainforest destruction, " according to several Chicago-based media

outlets. The protesters, and person on the ground coordinating the

effort, were eventually arrested. Cargill, an agricultural giant that

had $88 billion in sales last year, has operations in 66 countries,

including a large operation in South America, where it buys and

processes soybeans used for vegetable oil and animal feed. A cargill

spokesman couldn't immediately be reached for comment on the protest.

On its Web site, Cargill said it has been working since 2006 to create

a system to monitor soy production and curb deforestation in the

Amazon. http://www.bizjournals.com/twincities/stories/2007/10/08/daily28.html

 

New York:

 

14) Only an hour from Manhattan, you can experience the profound

silence of the Upper Reservoir between Whitehouse Mountain and Mount

Misery in New York's Black Rock Forest. Or track the hawks wheeling

over pristine hills at the Pine Paddy outlooks in Norvin Green State

Forest in New Jersey, or find lonely trails in the Pine Barrens of

Long Island. Even seeming wilderness — give or take a fire tower — is

available to hikers at, say, the 1,300-foot level at Rattlesnake Hill

in Black Rock. Forests cover nearly 60 percent of New York, New Jersey

and Connecticut, and there is no question that they will continue to

exist. But a concern is growing: What will they look like? Will the

forests of the future resemble today's, or will they be a green tangle

of alien plants devoid of native oaks, maples and beeches? That is the

worst-case scenario envisioned by experts like Dr. Emile DeVito,

manager of science and stewardship at the New Jersey Conservation

Foundation. The pressure of development, the exploding deer population

and the proliferation of invasive plants and insects on the region's

native species is threatening the woodlands of New York, New Jersey

and Connecticut, according to forest managers, scientists and public

officials. " It is a quiet crisis, " said Carl P. Schulze Jr., director

of the division of plant industry in the New Jersey Department of

Agriculture. " The average person sees that the woods are green, " he

said, " and doesn't understand that foreign species — a form of

biological pollution — are outcompeting " native vegetation. For now,

the big trees are still there. But Dr. DeVito said it is the changes

taking place in the " understory, " the layer of vegetation beneath the

forest canopy, that are causing the most concern. From state to state

and forest to forest, the situation is variable and dynamic. " There is

a lot of healthy forest left, " said Dr. Joan Gardner Ehrenfeld, an

expert on invasive species who is a professor in the Department of

Ecology, Evolution and Natural Resources at Rutgers University.

http://www.nytimes.com/2007/10/07/nyregion/nyregionspecial2/07rCOVER.html?_r=1 & r\

ef=nyregionspec

ial2 & pagewanted=all & oref=slogin

 

USA:

 

15) For years, the Bush administration has been trying to weaken

protections for our nation's public forests by promoting more logging

and clear cutting, reducing protections for wildlife and water

resources, and limiting citizen involvement in the forest planning

process. Most recently, the Administration has proposed new draft

National Forest Management Act regulations that are uncannily similar

to the regulations they proposed in 2005; the same regulations that

were found illegal by a federal district court. The " new " proposed

regulation once again ignores the public, the courts, and the law and

seriously undermines critical safeguards for our forests that were put

in place over two decades ago.House Natural Resources Chairman Nick

Rahall (D-WV) is circulating a congressional sign on letter, asking

that the Bush administration withdraw the proposed 2007 Forest

Planning Rule. Act Now: Call your Representative today, and ask them

to sign the letter supporting strong national forest planning. Click

here to contact your Representative. Calls must be made by October 15!

http://www.congress.org/congressorg/directory/congdir.tt

 

Canada:

 

16) The Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society (CPAWS) and forestry

corporation Tembec have negotiated a minimum 50-year halt on logging

in an area used extensively by woodland caribou on the east side of

Lake Winnipeg. Habitat protection is key to maintaining populations of

this threatened species, as they are extremely sensitive to human

developments. " This is good news for caribou. CPAWS looks forward to

our ongoing efforts with Tembec to increase protections for caribou, "

stated Ron Thiessen, Executive Director of the CPAWS Manitoba chapter.

" Healthy boreal forests are critical to caribou survival. " The 26,000

ha area deferred from harvesting is the " winter core zone " of the Owl

Lake woodland caribou herd. In other words, the lands the herd uses

most during Manitoba's cold months. A 50-year deferral of forestry

operations in the area provides security for some of the herd's most

important habitat while allowing ongoing research to identify more

about survival needs of this threatened species. " Winter is an

important season for woodland caribou. Their survival depends on

finding areas with sufficient food, favourable snowcover, and few

predators -- conditions that are characteristic of old forests, "

according to Dr. Jim Schaefer, Associate Professor, Biology

Department, Trent University. The Owl Lake woodland caribou herd is

located in Manitoba's southernmost caribou range. Habitats south of

their range, such as in Whiteshell Park, have been so altered by human

activities that caribou no longer reside there. The Manitoba

government recognizes major threats to the caribou as habitat loss,

degradation, and fragmentation.

http://cpaws.org/news/archive/2007/10/threatened-species-habitat-pro.php

 

Armenia:

 

17) Armenian Engineers and Scientists of America (AESA) has been

keeping you informed of the situation with the its Fast Growing Tree

Project in Armenia during last year. We are please to announce that we

were able to get back the nursery in Armavier, which is approximately

one hectare of land from 14 hectares of land that is illegally taken

by the minister of finance. Survival of this nursery is essential for

the future of the fast growing trees in Armenia. Samples from all 53

types of the fast growing poplars that have been imported to Armenia

are planted in this nursery. This success was results of numerous

letters and e-mails to the late prime minister of Armenia and support

of the new governor of the Armavier Marz. However, we still trying to

get back the reminder of 13 hectares. Attached are two write-ups in

Armenian and English that provide some details about the project. We

have submitted a letter to the new prime minister of Armenia that

provide history and details of the Fast growing Tree Project and

issues related to the illegal confiscation of the land.

http://www.hetq.am/eng/ecology/7154/

 

Ghana:

 

18) Information reaching The Chronicle indicates that the youth of

Atobiase in the Adansi South District have been selling forest

reserves to chain saw operators to fell trees in and outside the

forest reserves in the district. All efforts by the District Forestry

Manager to halt the activities of these irate youths have proved

futile. The youth, on a number of occasions, have battled with some

security personnel and forestry guard to find their way out from the

reserve after cutting down some trees. According to the District

Forestry Manager, Francis Bilson Ogoe, last Saturday, he received

information that some chain saw operators had gone to cut trees from

outside the forest reserve and were about to leave. He said, on

receiving the information, he quickly organised his men with two armed

policemen and dispatched them to the area to seize the logs that had

been cut by those chain saw operators. He said the number of lumber

seized were seventy, and on their way back to their office, some irate

youths at Atobiase blocked the road with car tyres that had been set

ablaze and were armed with cutlasses and sticks, demanding the release

of the seized lumber before they would allow the car to pass. Mr. Ogoe

explained that in the cause of the incident, one of his men rang him

and told him about what had happened and he quickly ordered his men

and the policemen to offload the lumber to the angry youths. He

further explained that, in the process of offloading the lumber, the

Range Supervisor, Lariba Zinkam, was attacked by the irate youth who

struggled with her and beat her mercilessly. He continued that Lariba

sustained severe injuries all over her body and was quickly rushed to

the hospital for treatment. According to him, the case was reported to

the District Police when his men and the two police men returned to

the office and, immediately, more police personnel were sent to the

town to arrest the culprits.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200710090899.html

 

Cameroon:

 

19) " You cannot combat the rate of deforestation without tackling the

root causes such as poverty " , he told pressmen at the opening ceremony

of the workshop to draw up a five-year action plan for ITTO. The ITTO

official said his organisation will intensify the promotion of

community forestry, ensure the rational use of forest resources,

promote industrialisation and strengthen the capacity of forest

industries among others in order to effectively increase the fight

against poverty. For five days running, experts from some member

countries will examine with diligence actions of the organisation for

the next five years. In his speech at the opening ceremony at the

Yaounde Hilton, the Minister of Forestry and Wildlife, Elvis Ngolle

Ngolle, urged participants to prioritise strategic actions, ensure

increase participation of the private sector and Non Governmental

Organisations, and enhance the role of ITTO as a multilateral

institution. The new plan of action under scrutiny is coming at a

crucial point for the organisation. First, the new agreement goes into

force next year, probably in February. Second, there are many emerging

issues of international concern such as climate change. Against this

backdrop, ITTO has to come out with a plan that will make it more

available on the scene of action.

http://allafrica.com/stories/200710100809.html

 

Ecuador:

 

20) The documentary " Keepers of Eden " director Yoram Porath shows that

the Huaorani are learning how power works. Porath was in Quito almost

two years ago when scores of Huaorani marched through the streets.

Dressed in traditional clothing -- which meant most of them didn't

wear very much at all -- they occupied the Ecuadorean national

legislature. The Huaorani were successful in embarrassing the

government into prohibiting the Brazilian oil company Petrobras from

building a road into Yasuni for drilling. It was seeing the protest in

Quito that convinced Porath that he had to tell the story of the

Huaorani's fight against the oil companies. " In Yasuni, the amount of

oil is not that great, not like Saudi Arabia, " Porath said in an

interview. " They can drill it and take it out in a few years. Once

they destroy the forest, that's it. No more forest. It's a cynical

abuse of the environment. " Keepers of Eden is receiving its world

premiere at the Vancouver International Film Festival because the

filmmakers were drawn to the festival's new $25,000 Kyoto Planet

Climate for Change Award. Porath and the producers will be at the

film's next screening, on Sunday at 9:15 p.m. at Granville 2. The film

is narrated by Joanne Woodward. Just making Keepers of Eden was a

challenge -- one that nearly cost Porath his life at least twice. Even

though Yasuni is a national park, Porath had to get a permit to enter

from whatever oil company controlled a particular oil concession. He

said if he'd been honest about what he was planning to do, he would

never have been able to document how oil companies are polluting the

Amazon. Instead, he got approval by telling them he was making a

nature documentary. Once he got in the dense jungle, roads often

didn't exist. He and his crew would have to walk along paths carrying

their equipment for days to reach examples of contamination -- the

spots oil companies never show journalists. Porath was taken to giant

fields that were filled with oil and then topped with dirt by Texaco

before the company left in 1992. Since then, the waste oil and soil

have mixed to create a toxic petroleum quicksand several metres deep.

Porath said there are thousands of such environmental hazards in the

region.

http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/arts/story.html?id=df3fbf1b-80bf-46ac-a3\

37-f7f42cef8109

 

21) Lago Agrio (Sour Lake) in Ecuador defies expectations on many

levels. It begins in the Sixties when oil giant Texaco signed a

contract with the Ecuadorian government to prospect for oil in the

north of the country, close to the border with Colombia. In 1972,

full-scale production began. Texaco's time in the jungle - just over

20 years - appears to have left one of the biggest environmental scars

ever seen, including some 700 open-air toxic-waste pits, the legacy -

say campaigners - of the systematic 'dumping' of crude oil waste.

According to the same campaigners, during its Amazonian tenure, Texaco

poured around 12bn gallons of highly toxic crude oil waste into the

Amazon. Chevron, which bought the company in 2001, argues that Texaco

complied with Ecuadorian law and didn't put profits before the need to

protect the environment. Either way, it's a salutary lesson in what

can happen when big oil moves in and the rest of humanity elects to

turn a blind eye and ignore a politically and geographically difficult

situation. If it wasn't for two lawyers - Pablo Fajardo in Ecuador and

Steven Donziger in the US - who represent the 30,000 indigenous

Amazonian people who live in the Lake Agrio area, and who launched a

class action against Chevron in 2003, it wouldn't be on the radar at

all. All of which explains why David de Rothschild decided to take a

group of celebrated artists - including Gabriel Orozco - to Lago Agrio

as eyewitnesses to the oil pits and devastation, and why he is now

exhibiting the body of work that they have created. De Rothschild is a

scion of the famous banking family (his father is financier Sir Evelyn

de Rothschild). He is variously described as an adventurer, expedition

leader and ecological educator, which makes him sound like a young man

in need of a proper profession.

http://observer.guardian.co.uk/magazine/story/0,,2181338,00.html

 

 

Jamaica:

 

22) Jamaica Labour Party Senator and Mayor of Kingston and St Andrew,

Desmond McKenzie, on Friday called for the indiscriminate cutting of

trees to be made a criminal offence. McKenzie, who was participating

in the Forestry Department's fifth annual National Tree Planting Day

activities at the Hope Botanical Gardens in Kingston, suggested that

it was time Jamaicans examine how the absence of trees contributes to

natural disasters such as flooding. " Flooding is not only caused by a

little man throwing a mattress in the gully. It is caused by the bad

environmental practice which we develop of cutting down trees, "

McKenzie said. " I would like the Ministry of Agriculture to push for

legislation to make the cutting down of trees a criminal offence. "

Last Friday's tree planting was organised to highlight the effects of

global warming and the importance of trees in slowing climate change.

Also participating in the activities was Marilyn Headley, the Forestry

Department's chief executive officer. She expressed concerns about the

depletion of the country's natural forestry and said it was imperative

that every Jamaican plant at least one tree in this year's

reforestation project in a bid to minimise the effects of global

warming.

http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/html/20071008T180000-0500_128150_OBS_MCKENZI\

E_WANTS_ILLEGAL

_CUTTING_OF_TREES_A_CRIMINAL_OFFENCE_.asp

 

Bolivia:

 

23) Let me avail myself of this opportunity: I come from a culture

based on peace, from a lifestyle based on equality, of living not only

in solidarity with all people, but also living in harmony with Mother

Earth. For the indigenous movement, land cannot be a commodity; it is

a mother that gives us life, so how could we convert it into a

commodity as the western model does? This is a profound lesson which

we must learn in order to resolve the problems of humanity that are

being discussed here, climate change and pollution. Where does this

pollution come from? It comes from, and is generated by, the

unsustainable development of a system which destroys the planet: in

other words, capitalism. I want to use this opportunity to call on

sectors, groups and nations to abandon luxury, to abandon

over-consumption, to think not only about money but about life, to not

only think about accumulating capital but to think in wider terms

about humanity. Only then can we begin to solve the root causes of

these problems facing humanity. Because if we don't think that way, if

we do not change, it won't matter if business owners have a lot of

money, no matter if they are a multinational or even a country - no

one can escape these ecological problems, environment problems, and

climate change. No one will be spared, and the wealth that some

country, some region or some capitalist may have will be useless. I

feel that it is important to organize an international movement to

deal with the environment, a movement that will be above institutions,

businesses and countries that just talk about commerce, that only

think about accumulating capital. We have to organize a movement that

will defend life, defend humanity, and save the earth. I think that it

is important to think about some regions, some sectors and some

countries repaying what has often been called the ecological debt. If

we do not think about how this ecological debt will be paid, how are

we going to solve the problems of life and humanity? I want to say,

dear colleagues and friends, that we must assume the responsibility as

leaders or as presidents, as governments - we must save life, we must

save humanity, we must save the entire planet.

http://boliviarising.blogspot.com/2007/10/capitalism-is-worst-enemy-of-humanity.\

html

 

Peru:

 

24) " First just one came out, then two, then three, four, five, six,

seven, but there were more than that in total. We had a dozen

machetes, a dozen knives and some axes and pots with us. We gave these

to them. Not by hand, but by leaving them on the beach. We said to

them, 'Come closer' but they didn't want to. They said to us, 'Go

further back, further back,' so we did. " The encounter between José, a

Peruvian from the Las Piedras river area near the border with Brazil,

and members of the large isolated Mashco-Piro tribe living in the deep

Amazonian rain forest, took place this year and was described to the

anthropologist Richard Hill, of Survival, the international campaign

for tribal peoples. Following a series of similar encounters and

incidents, such as one this week when a Peruvian government team

photographed a group of 21 Indians from the air, Mr Hill and other

anthropologists are reassessing how many tribes there may be left who

have chosen to shun the 21st century. " Only 30 or so years ago, it was

believed there were just 12, " said Stephen Corry, the director of

Survival. " Now we think there are 107 living in isolation. As more and

more incursions are made into the forest, more and more groups are

being found. The more people look, the more are being found, " he said.

Some tribes who shun contact have a fair idea of life outside the

forest, according to Mr Corry, and may have machetes which they could

have acquired from contact with other groups. " Others may have had

contact with outsiders generations ago, before they retreated deeper

into forests because of incursions by westerners. Others may have no

idea of country, other languages, or money, and no one has got close

to them " . This year the Brazilian government increased its estimate of

the number of isolated tribes in its part of the Amazon from 40 to 67.

But it acknowledged some were reduced to a few individuals.

http://cuttingedgers.blogspot.com/2007/10/we-said-to-them-come-closer-but-they.h\

tml

 

Brazil:

 

25) An Amazonian Indian in full shaman regalia (head-dress, beads,

teeth etc) is flying to London with Survival International to doorstep

the sportswear tycoon over his rainforest conservation scheme.

Eliasch, who is worth £350m, has bought 400,000 acres of Amazonian

rainforest to save it from loggers, soya farmers and cattle ranchers.

He encourages others to do the same, paying £70 an acre at his

foundation, Cool Earth. Supporters include Sir Nicholas Stern, Philip

Pullman, Ricky Gervais and Ian Hislop. But the UN prize-winner Davi

Kopenawa Yanomami, claims Eliasch has " exaggerated " the benefits of

his " useless " scheme. " You napëpë [whites], " says Kopenawa, " want to

buy pieces of rainforest. This is useless. The forest cannot be

bought; it is our life and we have always protected it. Give us back

our lands and our health before it's too late for us and for you. "

Eliasch's pal Matthew Owen, director of Cool Earth, praises Kopenawa

but rejects the " very aggressive attack " . He says: " We give rainforest

back to communities and work to support them in sustaining their

lifestyles. " Someone could end up being fed to the piranhas here.

http://news.independent.co.uk/people/pandora/article3043746.ece

 

26) The first sale of carbon offsets on a developing world's regulated

stock exchange took place recently when Sao Paulo, Brazil sold USD

$18.5 million dollars worth of carbon credits at auction on the

Mercantile and Futures Exchange. This got a lot of investors excited,

and experts say it's an important first step for institutionalizing a

carbon marking and for showing that developing economies can make

money fighting climate change. Benjamin Vitale, Conservation

International's Senior Adviser on Eco-System Markets and Finance,

explained further: " I think the importance of this is twofold: The

more developing countries' financial services sectors can be trading

this kind of asset and commodity regularly, just like they trade soy

in Brazil, it enables them to trade other credit like emissions from

deforestation. It also helps get out the word about climate change and

why it's important for Brazil. " The purchaser of the credits was

Dutch-Belgian Fortis Bank, which beat 13 other bids to purchase the

offsets and buy the rights to emit 891,163 US tons of CO2 for $22.90

per metric ton. Under the Kyoto Protocol, companies that emit CO2 and

methane can buy carbon offsets to lower their emissions. The carbon

credits are from Brazil's Bandeirantes Landfill project to produce

energy from the methane released from tons of solid waste that arrives

each day.

http://mariaenergia.blogspot.com/2007/10/first-carbon-sale-in-developing-market.\

html

 

27) Forests in the Amazon are much more resilient to drought that

previously thought, researchers have found. A study published in

Science last week (21 September) suggests that forests showed

increased — not decreased — levels of photosynthesis in response to a

drought. Researchers concluded that canopy vegetation, composed mainly

of leaves of the upper parts of trees, is capable of increasing

photosynthesis during drought periods of up to two years. Scientists

used satellite data to construct a model to measure and compare the

green areas of certain parts of the Amazon during widespread drought

in 2005, the most extreme since 1999. They found that the region's

" greenness " — linked to photosynthetic activity — did not decline, as

expected in drought conditions, but actually increased significantly.

Humberto Ribeiro da Rocha, one of the researchers, from the University

of Sao Paulo, Brazil, said the results showed that the forest's

reaction to limited water is much more favourable to forest survival

than expected from most large scale numerical models. Rocha suggested

that the extensive reach of the trees' roots may enable them to reach

water reservoirs deep in the ground. " Today there is already reported

evidence of humid tropical forest trees in Amazonia that reach soil

water up to ten metres deep in drought periods, without losing water

through evaporation, " he told SciDev.Net. He added that the forest may

not necessarily maintain the same biomass in these situations. But the

results do not reduce the threat of global warming that could turn the

Amazon into savannah, Rocha warned. He said thatif the climate becomes

constantly hotter and drier, even deep water reservoirs could be

depleted.

http://desertification.wordpress.com/2007/10/06/amazonia-forests-more-resilient-\

to-drought-scid

evnet/

 

28) Conservation Biology: Predicting Birds' Responses to Forest Fragmentation

The rule-of-thumb is that a 90% loss of habitat area leads to a

w25–50% loss of species [14]. The predictive power of this

relationship may be weak, because it does not account for either

habitat heterogeneity or fragmentation, but it is the only such

existing model [15]. Although the identities of disappearing species

are as important as their number, how the abundances of species change

because of habitat degradation has been conceptually and empirically

little developed. This is a critical lacuna as the disappearance of

functionally important and irreplaceable groups such as specialists,

scavengers or seed dispersers can affect the entire community [16].

Fragmentation frequently results in the 'cutting' of the long tail of

the rank-abundance curve, as rare species, particularly diverse in

tropical forests, often disappear first (see Figure 1 in [7]). Such

'nested' distributions where ''species present at species-poor sites

are subsets of those present There is a major need for global

meta-analyses of fragmentation responses, combining standardized

measures [17,18] with existing data. These analyses will help

formulate the drivers of fragmentation sensitivity and nestedness,

explain regional differences, and contribute to the development of

ecological theory [7]. http://www.current-biology.com/ Vol 17 No 19

 

Peru:

 

29) With a substantial majority of eligible voters voting in all three

communities, the count was about 95 percent opposed to mining in each

of the three communities. This vote may serve to protect the

headwaters of vital rivers such as the Chinchipe and Quiroz that serve

major reservoirs and agricultural areas, towns and cities. These

rivers also supply water to wilderness habitats for endangered species

such as the mountain tapir, the spectacled bear, the white-winged

guan, Peruvian cock-of-the-rock, condor, rare and endemic

hummingbirds, rare orchids, Podocarpus conifers, amphibians, lizards,

and insects, that have been descriptively listed in detail by the

Andean Tapir Fund. A sizeable portion of the habitat for many endemic

plant and animal species associated with the singular Huancabamba

Depression occurs in the area affected by the Rio Blanco mining

project. If this project were to go through, several other similar

projects would be likely to follow, resulting in a devastation of this

unique, intrinsically valuable evolutionary area. Ancient temple ruins

that are reported in Andean forests would also be affected by the

mining project. All who participated in this vote were threatened in

many and various ways by the pro-mining factions, including the most

extreme - by death, says Zegarra, whose life has been repeatedly

threatened. Nevertheless, at the polls, the voters chose life. They

chose the preservation of what remains of the natural world in their

home region and rejected the massive open-pit, heap leach Rio Blanco

mining project. Conservationists call this vote a significant turn of

events in favor of nature and ecological sustainability, and a wise

change of course for Peru.

http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/oct2007/2007-10-10-01.asp

 

Asia:

 

30) One of Asia's outstanding foresters lost his battle with leukemia.

Dr. C. Chandrasekharan just completed a 351-page manuscript on Asia's

troubled forestry. A colleague in the UN Food and Agriculture

Organization, in Bangkok and Rome, " Chandra " made a request: draft a

feature, in layman's language, that would be released on the day the

book comes off the press. But death remained the ultimate waiver for

embargoes. Below is a summary of that draft. Asia lost, over the last

half century, half of its forests. This depletion is historically

unprecedented. It also triggered accelerating degradation, whose

adverse impacts could scuttle hopes for 21st-century re-greening.

Damage inflicted by subtle degradation can be 10 times more severe

than deforestation. If unchecked, investments and programs are reduced

to " nothing more than chasing the wind. " Asia and the Pacific are

unevenly forested. Only 2.1 percent of Afghanistan has trees left,

while forests blanket 67 percent of Papua New Guinea. About 450

million people, including indigenous tribes, depend on this resource

for survival. But there's little elbow room left. Mass poverty,

economic and technological change, plus expectations of larger

populations, ratchet pressure on forests. Region-wide, gross

deforestation now reaches an estimated three to four million hectares

annually. In the Greater Mekong Subregion, forests roughly the size of

nine small island countries are razed yearly. Asia-Pacific countries

are down to only 0.16 ha per head, compared to 1.89 ha for Latin

America.Wood harvests rose nearly sixfold in the last 50 years. A

timber-rich exporter in the mid-1950s, the Philippines today imports

wood. There's a " black hole " on information about trees outside

forests. So, treat with skepticism those rosy forecasts on adequate

wood and fiber in the near future. Forest statistics are often

doctored. Over a decade, actual deforestation in Cambodia, Laos,

Burma, Thailand and Vietnam reached almost eight times more than what

official reports depict. Degradation's onset--falling crown covers,

failure of plants to regenerate, soil collapse, shrinking share of

commercial species--is incremental. It's hard to spot. Over the long

run, degradation can inflict more system-wide irreversible damage. The

single statistic of shrinking wood volume is " the smoking gun. " In

1990, Asia Pacific had 125 cubic meters per hectare. But in just a

decade, this had been whittled down to less than half: 61 cubic meters

per hectare. " Shrinkage of biomass, within the same period, was even

more drastic: 171,000/ha to only 77,000/ha. "

http://opinion.inquirer.net/inquireropinion/columns/view_article.php?article_id=\

93715

 

India:

 

31) About 130 acres of pond (Joharh) was being declared as Community

Reserve in Gaibi Sahib village in Jind district as per the wishes of

the village people. While speaking on the concluding function of State

Level Wildlife week at Morni on Tuesday Choudhry said that Haryana

Forest Department had taken concrete steps to create awareness among

the masses to conserve wildlife and their habitat in the State. On

this occasion, the Forests Minister gave a cash prize of Rs.20,000

each to Range Forests Officer, Gurgaon, Devender Singh Yadav and his

driver . Sukhbir Singh for their bravery. Choudhry said that Kalesar

National Park of Haryana was one of the best park of the country and

to strengthen patrolling,control poaching and for the better

management of the park, two elephants were being engaged on

experimental basis. The Minister further informed that State

Government was committed to provide better facilities to the animals

in the zoos in the state. She said that Bhiwani and Rohtak Zoo were in

a process of getting renovated. She said that may poster carrying the

appeal of protecting the wildlife in the State were displayed at the

important places in the State to mark the wildlife week celebrations.

Various painting competitions and wildlife quiz were conducted for

school children in all districts of the state and nature education

camps would be conducted in Kalesar National Park for 120 winners of

these competitions in four parts, she added. She said that number of

steps had been taken by the State Government to conserve Forests and

Wildlife. The process of formation of committees for the management of

conservation and the community reserves was also in the process, she

said. http://www.punjabnewsline.com/content/view/6008/92/

 

Myanmar:

 

32) In eight weeks the quiet narrow road that hugs Nongdao's sugarcane

fields on the way to the ancient jungles of Myanmar will be overrun

with Chinese trucks loaded down with illegal timber. " Come December

and January this road will be so packed with trucks heavy with Myanmar

timber that you can't pass for hours, " said Xiao Zhengong, a

32-year-old resident of the area. Nongdao, a town of just hundreds of

people, is one small link in the global supply chain that makes up the

multi-billion-dollar wood processing industry centred in China. " Six

of ten timber logs chopped in the world's forest are destined for

China, " said Tamara Stark, a forestry expert for Greenpeace in China,

a rapacious pace many fear will soon leave much of Southeast Asia

treeless. " Only a few years ago loggers could travel a couple of days,

now they have to travel a least a week into Myanmar to find the

forests, " said Yang Minggao, general manager of Rongmao Wood Trading

Company in nearby Ruili. The piles of illegally hewed trees, many also

from Papau New Guinea and Indonesia, arrive at one of China's 200,000

mills, before being destined for the showrooms of major US and EU

retailers as floorboards or furniture. According to official Chinese

statistics, the total value of China's forest exports were worth 17.2

billion dollars in 2005, up six times from 1997, making it a hugely

profitable business. Global demand has pushed China's total imports of

timber logs up nine-fold over the last decade to be worth 5.6 billion

dollars last year, according to Chinese customs data that does not

include the illicit trade. The insatiable appetite means many of

Asia's ancient forests face imminent extinction, and, with it, the

demise of hundreds of forest-dependent plant and animal species,

environmental groups say. The timber trade is mired in a web of

official corruption on both sides of the border, locals said. The

issue is made even more complex in northern Myanmar's Kachin state,

where the Kachin Independent Organisation and a coalition of

guerrillas rule the territory with de facto independence. On the

Chinese side, police give out special logging permits to private local

companies, a system that fosters kickbacks and a black market, farmer

Yang said. Inside Myanmar, Chinese loggers bring piles of cash to

bribe the Southeast Asian nation's unpredictable militias and corrupt

government officials.

http://www.terradaily.com/reports/Chinese_loggers_stripping_Myanmars_ancient_for\

ests_999.html

 

Papua New Guinea:

 

33) Greenpeace has warned that Indonesia's plans to clear Papuan

forests for palm oil plantations will hinder efforts to mitigate

climate change. Indonesia's President has asked Papua's Governor

Barnabas Seubu to open up five million hectares of land for conversion

into palm oil plantations in a bid to increase biofuel production.

Indonesia is on a fresh drive to become the world's biggest bio-fuel

producer, and aims to reduce carbon emissions as well as spending on

petrol. Jakarta also claims it's working to reduce the rampant illegal

logging which is destroying its largest remaining tracts of

rainforest, in Papua But Greenpeace Asia/Pacific's Tiy Chung says the

government's plans to cut more Papuan forest will only increase carbon

output. " Indonesia is the third largest greenhouse gas emitter in the

world, after the United States and China, and this is purely from

forest conversion or forest destruction. The massive forest fires that

Indoesia has every year are from land, especially peak land's being

cleared for things like palm oil production. So Indonesia could

basically cut most of its greenhouse gas emissions by stopping forest

destruction. " http://www.rnzi.com/pages/news.php?op=read & id=35643

 

Indonesia:

 

34) The international environmental organization Greenpeace has opened

a " forest defenders camp " on Indonesia's Sumatra Island to bring

global attention to the country's destruction of its forests. VOA's

Nancy-Amelia Collins in Jakarta has more. The camp was opened in

Sumatra's Riau province by Greenpeace, local communities, and local

government officials. It will hold about 40 people. The aim, according

to a Greenpeace spokeswoman, is to help prevent seasonal fires and

further deforestation, and conduct bio-diversity surveys. Hundreds of

fires are set every year by local farmers and large agricultural

corporations to clear land for plantations. In recent years, heavy

smoke from the fires has blanketed parts of Indonesia, Malaysia, and

Singapore for weeks at a time. The Southeast Asia director of

Greenpeace, Emmy Hafidz, draws a link between the loss of Indonesian

forest and global climate change. " This is our bearing witness to the

destruction of Indonesian forest, especially the peat land, and to

expose to the world the link between deforestation and greenhouse gas

emissions that lead to climate change, " Indonesia has around 60

percent of the world's tropical peat lands. These swamps release huge

amounts of carbon dioxide when they are drained or burned to make way

for crops such as palm oil, pulp plantations, and other timber

industries. These peat lands are being destroyed at a rapid rate. A

recent report by the World Bank says this has made Indonesia the

world's third-largest emitter of carbon gases, which are thought to be

a major contributor to global warming. Greenpeace officials say the

opening of the defenders' camp was timed to coincide with a U.N.

climate change conference that will be held in December on Indonesia's

Bali Island. http://www.voanews.com/english/2007-10-09-voa16.cfm

 

Australia:

 

35) Forest protesters have blockaded a road leading to a cable logging

coupe in Tasmania's south. The Huon Valley Environment Centre (HVEC)

and Still Wild Still Threatened have organised tree-sits to block

access to eucalypt forest in the Picton Valley. " These cable logging

operations are used to decimate forests on steep slopes that can't be

logged using conventional methods, " HVEC spokesman Will Mooney said.

" These operations degrade water catchments, carbon sinks and

threatened species habitat. " He said the " degradation " was being

allowed to continue while the federal government had failed to ensure

a proper assessment of the impact of the Gunns pulp mill on Tasmania's

forests. Federal Environment Minister Malcolm Turnbull approved the

mill, earmarked for the Tamar Valley, in Tasmania's north, last week

subject to 48 conditions. Mr Mooney said the protesters would stay in

the area long term.

http://www.theage.com.au/news/National/Forest-activists-block-logging-coupe/2007\

/10/10/119169

5949137.html

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