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Today for you 36 new articles about earth's trees! (279th edition)

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earthtreenews-

Weblog: http://olyecology.livejournal.com

 

--Pacific Northwest: 1) Power companies competing for forests

products, 2) Owl scams,

--Washington: 3) Legislative session aims to defend Weyerhaeuser's

murderous guilt

--Oregon: 4) Non-harvest forests, 5) A WOPR of a diversion,

--California: 6) Monterey's 500,000 acres of oak woodlands, 7) Jackson forest,

--Idaho: 8) Industries still a threat to last of the big wild,

--Montana: 9) B-D Partnership protects rock & ice and gives forests to loggers

--Wisconsin: 10) Chequamegon-Nicolet NF endangered, 11) Plum Creek sells land,

--Ohio: 12) Industry Stats plus greenwashing

--New York: 13) Municipal ban on use of tropical hardwoods

--New Jersey: 14) Forest history, 15) 8,000-plus acre watershed surveyed by Duke

--Tennessee: 16) Security funds needed for mountaintop activist

--USA: 17) Bush gives up on gutting forest planning rules

--Canada: 18) 2,000 football fields of forest at stake

--UK: 19) Ten-strong group of protesters,

--Finland: 20) Preserving southern forests, 21) They say industry

still has plenty to log,

--Iran: 22) Qeshm Island's Hara forests to be a UNESCO natural heritage site

--Africa: 23) Tree and ants depend on giraffes and elephants

--Cameroon: 24) Wildlife Artists return from 1-month study of forests

--Colombia: 25) Cloud forests are jewels of biodiversity only 50% remain

--Guyana: 26) Giving away another Million hectares to loggers

--Brazil: 27) Gov reviewing bids from companies seeking to mine 96,360 hectares

--India: 28) Forests act as coastal embankment

--Vietnam: 29) Forest destruction in the Central Highland's Dak Nong

--China: 30) China's forest corps

--Philippines: 31) Folly of Bali plus deforestation stats

--Indonesia: 32) Sumatra island secretly being destroyed by AP & P

--Papua New Guinea: 33) Felling of New Britain badly affects 21 bird species

--New Zealand: 34) Project Last Stand

--World-wide: 35) A treetop walk, 36) Congo Jones and the Loggers of Doom,

 

Pacific Northwest:

 

1) Power companies in the South and Pacific Northwest will drive

prices for wood fuels higher as new facilities are built to produce an

energy alternative to fossil fuels, experts in the forest products

industry said Friday. But the supply of wood chips " a byproduct of

lumber production used at pulp mills and power facilities " is

dropping as residential construction drastically slows in the weak

housing market. The reduced supply has raised prices by almost 10

percent since the third quarter of 2006. " The supply of wood chips is

already low because of the problems with the housing market, " said

Pete Stewart, president of price information provider Forest2Market.

" Increased demand from power facilities will continue to increase

prices. " The current increase in demand for wood fuels is coming from

forest products companies in the U.S. that have either updated or

installed new boilers that run entirely on biomass " plant material

such as wood chips, bark and tree limbs. Forest products companies

burn wood fuel to power their operations. Southern forests are facing

additional pressure from Europe as utilities overseas, bound by the

Kyoto protocol to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, import wood chips

to produce power. The weak dollar has made it cheaper for Europe to

import wood fuels to satisfy their energy needs. The U.S. has not

signed Kyoto, but individual states are mandating a reduction in

carbon dioxide emissions from power companies. In the Pacific

Northwest, the dynamics are slightly different. The majority of wood

chips are sawmill byproducts used by the region " s pulp mills.

Generally, wood-fueled boilers are fed hog fuel, which is made of bark

and other wood waste unsuitable for pulp production. " With the startup

of new power facilities, the forest industry will have the opportunity

to earn additional revenue by collecting forest biomass to supplement

residual hog fuel, " said Gordon Culbertson, Forest2Market " s Pacific

Northwest region manager. " Many companies are seeking creative

strategies to develop biomass as an economical source of fuel. "

Nevertheless, prices for wood chips in the Pacific Northwest are

increasing because sawmill production is idled by poor lumber demand.

To fill the void, small saw logs that would have otherwise been used

in lumber production are being chipped.

http://www.energy-daily.com/reports/Alternative_Fuel_Demand_Boosts_Prices_Of_For\

est_Products_999

..html

 

2) The Bush administration is pressing ahead with rulemaking revisions

to the primary law governing logging on national forests, which forced

deep cutbacks in timber harvest to protect the spotted owl.

Agriculture Undersecretary Mark Rey said Tuesday from Washington,

D.C., that the administration decided it was quicker and cheaper to do

an environmental impact statement on the 2005 rules, as ordered by a

judge, rather than wait for the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to

consider the case. But Marc Fink, attorney for the Center for

Biological Diversity, said because the draft environmental impact

statement posted on the Forest Service Web site found no impacts, the

issue will likely be back in court seeking changes to the rules

themselves. " They haven't cured anything, " Fink said from Duluth,

Minn. " They're coming back with the same regulations. " Cutbacks in

logging of more than 80 percent on Northwest national forests to

protect habitat for the spotted owl, salmon and other species were

forced by a federal court ruling based on the National Forest

Management Act, a 1984 law which requires the Forest Service to

maintain viable populations of so-called indicator species. The

northern spotted owl, a threatened species whose numbers continue to

decline, is the indicator species for old growth forests in the

Northwest, where the Bush administration has been pressing to ease

logging restrictions. Fink said conservation groups opposing the rule

revisions were particularly concerned that they weakened requirements

in the law to maintain healthy populations of indicator species.

http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/nation/20080108-1405-wst-forestrules.html

 

3) Biologists grappled Tuesday with the realities of shooting barred

owls that invade the older forest habitat of federally protected

northern spotted owls, a strategy critics say the Bush administration

employs to help spotted owls while also trimming away at their

preserves in an effort to open up logging. A scientist who

experimented with barred owl control in Northern California said it

proved relatively easy, at least in limited areas of accessible

forests, and removing some adult barred owls before nesting season

could control the broader population and open a window for spotted

owls to come back. The cost would be relatively minor, Lowell Diller,

a biologist with Green Diamond Resource Co. in Northern California,

told researchers meeting Tuesday in Portland. He cautioned he wasn't

trying to make light of it, but said, " This is almost like a redneck

sport -- you do it from the tail of your pickup. "

http://www.oregonlive.com/news/oregonian/index.ssf?/base/news/119985450492580.xm\

l & coll=7

 

Washington:

 

4) As lawmakers outlined their 2008 plans, it was clear there is a

consensus that the Legislature needs to do something for victims of

the December floods. Details, of course, will be tougher to work out,

but with DeBolt coming from the heart of flood country, there will be

a high-profile advocate. But it took only a few minutes to see one

major difference in how lawmakers view the aftermath of the December

floods. House Speaker Frank Chopp, D-Seattle, talked about seeing a

Seattle Times photo that showed a logging clear-cut and a massive

landslide. Chopp said the Legislature needs to look at how to prevent

similar damage from happening in the future. DeBolt said there's no

argument: " Clear-cuts cause slides. That's what happened in our area. "

But he also said that other flood damage was caused by environmental

protections, not logging practices. He said salmon-protection laws

that require buffer zones of trees left standing near streams

contributed to more flooding. A habitat-conservation plan that was

supposed to end long-standing environmental disputes around logging

and salmon protection has been proved a " debacle, " he said. " These are

really important questions: Who comes first, the salmon or the

humans? " The Senate Natural Resources, Ocean & Recreation Committee

will hold a public hearing Thursday " on the relationship between

forest practices, flood events and climate change. "

http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/politics/2004115172_postmanblog09m.html

 

Oregon:

 

4) Nashville-based Emma, an e-mail marketing and communications

service, is launching a new initiative to plant five trees for every

new customer it gets. Emma has partnered with the reforestation

non-profit Plant-It 2020 to help strengthen non-harvest forests across

the U.S. With nearly 300 companies, non-profits and agencies joining

Emma each month, the company hopes to sponsor at least 15,000 planted

trees. In the program's first month, nearly 1,000 trees have been

donated and will be planted in Oregon. " By moving their newsletters

and campaigns from print to e-mail, our customers are already doing

something nice for the environment, " says Suzanne Norman, Emma's

director of community relations. " Now, in addition to sparing trees,

they can actually help us plant some, too. Basically, we win, our

customers win, and the environment wins. If only there were some sort

of phrase to describe a situation in which multiple 'wins' occur. Oh

well. " http://www.bizjournals.com/nashville/stories/2008/01/07/daily25.html

5) Tim Hermach, executive director of the Native Forest Council (NFC),

says the WOPR is a " totally bogus plan " and the BLM is using " military

tactics, designed not to win but to refocus. " With all the focus on

the WOPR, he says, environmentalists are not paying attention to

stewardship contracting. " Stewardship end result contracting " was

created under the Clinton administration, says Forest Service

Employees for Environmental Ethics Executive Director Andy Stahl. It's

a plan in which land managers barter trees for " good works in the

woods " — improvements to the land or watershed. For example, a

contractor would thin trees from forestland and in exchange would

maintain trails on that land or get rid of trails to restore water

quality. Another of Barton's criticisms of stewardship contracting is

that the stewardship authority is " vague, " with " a lot of room for

mischief. " Barton also says that there is " no accurate measure of the

amount of wood taken from a forest under stewardship contracting, " and

" they don't scale the trees as they come out. " If trees are not scaled

(measured) Barton is concerned that there is no way of knowing if

larger trees are being taken out, in addition to the smaller thinned

trees. Finally, Barton contends that although stewardship contracts

" give the illusion of public involvement, " the final say lies not in

the community, but with regional agency directors. Oregon currently

has 26 Forest Service and four BLM stewardship projects, most of which

involve some degree of thinning for fuels reduction to prevent forest

fires or as an attempt to grow larger trees. Thinning is where the

controversy about stewardship arises. " Commercial thinning has the

environmental community split, " says Stahl. He divides the split into

" jobs in the woods " people who see " social merit in having a logging

industry and having communities like Sweet Home remain on the map "

versus " zero cut " who don't want to see any logging at all.

" Compounding the split, " he says, " are Wyden and DeFazio who have

declared themselves 'Thinning R Us.' "

http://www.eugeneweekly.com/2008/01/10/news1.html

 

California:

 

6) Monterey County is home to 500,000 acres of oak woodlands, and

county supervisors want to create a plan to protect them. The Board of

Supervisors agreed Tuesday to provide more options that will help

developers reduce impacts on oak trees, especially the region's native

coast live oaks. It also asked planners to create a management plan

that would allow the county to work with nonprofit land trusts,

developers and landowners in order to place such woodlands under

conservation easements. Conservation easements provide long-term

protection from development for a parcel of land, and landowners can

be compensated by the state or county for establishing them. " I think

this has some benefits for the agricultural industry, " said Supervisor

Dave Potter, who first asked for a local oak woodlands program in

November 2006. Development threatens about 24,000 acres of oak

woodlands in the county by 2040, according to the Planning Department.

The California Environmental Quality Act requires the county to

protect, replace or take other action when oak woodlands are

threatened by development. For example, the county can require new

trees be planted at the site or elsewhere to replace those cut down.

Bob Perkins, executive director of the Monterey Farm Bureau, joined

two Salinas land-use attorneys in asking to work with planners to

ensure the management plan keeps property rights and agriculture

interests in mind. " This program would have tremendous impacts on all

landowners, " Perkins said. Taking no action to protect the trees would

have significant environmental impacts, as well, planners said. " Oak

woodlands have a high level of habitat value, as well as the oaks

themselves, " said county planner Paula Bradley. The trees help clean

and recharge air and water resources, planners said, while the

woodlands provide a natural ecosystem for native birds, plants and

other wildlife. The supervisors directed planners to work with

landowners and agricultural representatives when drafting the local

Oak Woodlands Management Plan. If the state approves the plan, local

governments, landowners and nonprofit land trusts could apply for

state money to help establish the easements.

http://www.californianonline.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080109/NEWS01/8010\

90301/1002

 

7) On Wednesday, January 9, 2008, In an action that culminated 8 years

of controversy and litigation, the Board of Forestry voted 8 in favor

and 1 abstention to approve a new management plan for Jackson Forest

that is a milestone in moving Jackson State Forest towards management

in the broad public interest. At the meeting, the Board accepted

several amendments that brought the management plan into full

conformance with the consensus plan for the forest developed by the

Mendocino Working Group, which had representatives from the local

timber industry, the Sierra Club, and the Campaign. The Board agreed

to limit timber harvesting during a 3-year interim period to that

needed to fund the operations of Jackson Forest.. It also agreed to

give a newly-formed Jackson Advisory Group the authority to review

essentially all timber harvest plans during the interim period. These

were the final keys to getting the agreement of the Campaign to

Restore Jackson State Forest to support the new management plan. The

Board also approved the formation of a new advisory group for Jackson

State Forest, a central recommendation of the Mendocino Working Group,

and gave it the requested broad powers to develop a long-term

landscape plan for the forest. By the end of the 3-year interim

period, the advisory group will recommend changes to the new

management plan to reflect the group's vision for the future of the

forest. More details and supporting documents are at the Campaign

website, as well as my personal reflections on the history that has

brought us to this next phase. I've also written my personal account

of the Board of Forestry meeting on Wednesday.

http://www.jacksonforest.com/Publications/General/personal_notes_on_bof_approval\

..htm

 

Idaho:

 

8) Idaho's public forests are some of the most untouched and intact

wild areas left in the continental United States. Among other things,

the proposal would permit as much as 20,000 acres of roadless lands to

be directly lost to phosphate mining, an incredibly destructive type

of open pit mining, which often results in toxic selenium runoff that

poisons wildlife, and contaminates drinking water and fisheries.

Contamination near these mines (many of the phosphate mines in

southern Idaho are already officially designated as Superfund sites)

can get so bad that in 2006, state wildlife officials warned hunters

against eating liver from elk killed near them. If you want to really

see what I'm talking about just scroll down. The picture at the top of

this post is of a roadless area in Idaho before it was opened up to

phosphate mining. Now look below for to see the exact same valley (or

what's left of it) after the mining interests got their way. And Idaho

is just the beginning. The Forest Service has already announced its

intentions to open roadless areas in Colorado, and in the next few

weeks the nation's largest public forest, the Tongass National Forest

in Alaska will be added to the list.

http://switchboard.nrdc.org/blogs/awetzler/as_goes_idaho_so_goes_the_nati.html

 

Montana:

 

9) Here's a link to an overview map of the Beaverhead-Deerlodge

Partnership. It shows the proposed wilderness areas, as well as the

lands defined as potential for logging. If you are familiar with the

lands (as I am), you will note that most of the proposed wilderness is

high rugged terrain--i.e. lands that would never be logged in a

thousand years. Much of the proposed protected acreage will be a

" rocks and ice " wilderness proposal --really fine rocks and ice

country-- but still a repetition of the same old pattern of protecting

what is naturally protected by steep slopes, limited value trees, and

so forth. On the other hand, much of the lower elevation forest is

included in the base for logging, including some substantial roadless

areas. (Check out on the map the Highlands area by Butte). Tell me

what has the timber industry given up at all? They get nearly all the

lower elevation forested sites. I'm particularly disturbed by the

inclusion in potential logging eligible areas the lower slopes of the

West Pioneers, the valleys and forelands of the West Big Hole, much of

the North Big Hole, the South Big Hole, the Upper Rock Creek and Upper

Flint Creek drainages, the West Fork of the Madison in Gravelly Range,

the lower slopes of the Tobacco Roots, and Highlands/Whitetail areas

near Butte. Some of these areas, have already been logged in the past,

but new logging will bring new disturbance and human entry. BDP

supporters suggest that " only " 7000 acres a year will be logged. But

that is still 70,000 over ten years. And that number glosses over the

biological impact since nearly all of these lands included as

" eligible " are the most productive lands, lower elevation slopes and

valleys on the forest. Plus logging will be in large projects that

will be spread over just a few drainages at a time. In terms of

biological impact, this logging will have significant impacts. As I

have suggested in the past, this logging is being justified on false

premises. Advocates are suggesting that logging will reduce fire and

insect risks, and improve " forest health. " These assertions are based

on flawed science or at least science that is increasingly being

challenged. When we are going to get away from just promoting scenic

high country for wilderness and start to take to heart our supposed

commitment to preserving biodiversity, travel corridors and roadless

lands? But don't take my word--view the map yourself. For more on my

critiques of the proposals see my New West column

http://www.newwest.net/topic/article/beaverhead_deerlodge_partnership_misplaced/\

C38/L38/

 

Wisconsin:

 

10) The Chequamegon-Nicolet National Forest (CNNF) has been identified

as one of the " 10 most endangered national forests " in the nation. It

is one of the most heavily-logged national forests in the Eastern U.S.

It's a very special place. CNNF covers approximately 1.5 million acres

in the northern part of the state, including numerous rivers and more

than 300 species of animals. The CNNF consists primarily of northern

hardwood, mixed conifer, and aspen trees, along with numerous rivers,

lakes and other waterways. Its habitat include several endangered and

threatened species, such as the Northern goshawk, Red-shouldered hawk

and American pine marten. Yet, at the rate of cutting employed over

the last 10 years, every single log-able acre would be cut in 45

years. The harmful impacts of such extensive logging on waterways,

habitat and related natural resources and conservation goals are

significant. What's more, scientific research is beginning to show

that logging in the CNNF may contribute to global warming. The

Chequamegon Ecosystem Atmosphere Study—a multi-organizational research

effort studying biosphere/atmosphere interactions within the

forest—points to the role of Wisconsin forests in sequestering carbon

dioxide produced in North America. Widespread logging in CNNF is

creating a younger, more fragmented forest and turning this

potentially huge carbon sink into a net emitter of carbon. The

Environmental Law & Policy Center is working through federal courts to

protect this treasured resource. Learn about CNNF litigation and

advocacy here:

http://www.globalwarmingsolutions.org/political-solutions/cnnf-litigation-and-ad\

vocacy

The U.S. Forest Service continues to claim that logging improves

habitat for sensitive species. But fewer trees and more animals just

doesn't add up. Studies show that widespread logging of mature

northern hardwoods and aspen has harmed populations of some threatened

and endangered species in Wisconsin. We need to restore ecological

balance to this very special place in the Midwest. ELPC doesn't want

logging to stop—just to be more balanced with environmental

considerations.

http://www.globalwarmingsolutions.org/political-solutions/preserving-wisconsins-\

national-forest

 

11) The Forestland Group LLC (TFG) has purchased 100,000 acres of

northern Wisconsin timberland from Plum Creek Timber Company Inc.,

including 16,300 acres in the towns of Winter and Draper in Sawyer

County. According to its Web site, The Forestland Group was formed in

1995 as a long-term investment management organization to pursue

investments primarily in naturally regenerating hardwood and pine

forests for institutional investors. As the largest private owner of

hardwood timberlands in the United States, TFG currently manages

approximately 2.1 million acres in 17 states in the eastern U.S. With

the purchase from Plum Creek, TFG will obtain its first Wisconsin

timberlands. It owns 500,000 acres in the Great Lakes region — the

closest to Wisconsin being in upper Michigan. Once the sale is

complete, Plum Creek will remain the largest private landowner in

Wisconsin, owning approximately 400,000 acres of timberland in the

northern part of the state including 52,000 acres in Sawyer County.

" These lands are valuable timberlands that have been well-managed by

Plum Creek, and this purchase gives us the opportunity to enter

Wisconsin and participate in the state's forest products industry, "

said Chris Zinkhan, managing director of TFG. Prior to Plum Creek's

ownership, these timber lands in southeast Sawyer County were owned by

Consolidated Papers, Georgia-Pacific and Stora Enso. The Forestland

Group was the first timber management organization in the world to

have its entire portfolio certified by the Forest Stewardship Council.

Headquartered in Seattle, Wash., Plum Creek is the largest and most

geographically diverse private landowner in the nation, with 8.2

million acres of timberlands in major timber producing regions of the

United States and 10 wood products manufacturing facilities in the

Northwest. Plum Creek first entered Wisconsin in 2001 when it merged

with The Timber Company and acquired about 200,000 acres in the state.

Plum Creek then acquired an additional 307,000 acres from Stora Enso

in 2002. In Wisconsin, the company directly employs 25 people,

partners with more than 130 contractors and works with more than 60

customers throughout the state.

http://www.haywardwis.com/record/?section_id=34 & story_id=235364

 

Ohio:

 

12) Certifying Ohio's forests also will increase the local supply of

certified wood products for Ohio's wood products industry and will

make timber from Ohio state forests more marketable worldwide. The

movement toward third-party forest certification has grown steadily

since it began in the mid-1990s, and public forests in many

surrounding states already are managed under certification systems.

Pennsylvania, Michigan, Indiana and Minnesota all have certified their

state forests within the past 10 years. Ohio's state forests provide

habitat for a wide range of plant and animal species, including wild

turkey, bobcat and dozens of migratory bird species like the cerulean

warbler. The forests also act as natural filters for drinking water

and help prevent flooding and erosion. Ohio's forests also produce

some of the best hardwood timber in the country, and a 2006 study by

the Ohio State University shows the state's forest products industry

contributes $15.1 billion to Ohio's economy annually, employs more

than 119,000 people and generates more than $4 billion in payroll.

http://www.nature.org/wherewework/northamerica/states/ohio/press/press3285.html

 

New York:

 

13) Ecological Internet's campaign in support of long-standing local

efforts to end the use of ancient rainforest timbers by government in

New York City is enjoying initial success. Mayor Bloomberg has

announced a review of NYC policy, and the Park Department will no

longer use endangered woods in NYC park benches. We must ensure the

review ends the use of all ancient rainforest timbers, the Parks

decision is expanded, and an end to the use of ancient rainforest

timbers is enshrined in law and procurement policy. Please send the

updated alert at:

http://www.rainforestportal.org/alerts/send.asp?id=nyc_rainforest

 

New Jersey:

 

14) In New Jersey and other Eastern states, forests were cleared for

agriculture 200 years ago but grew back as cities rose to prominence

in the 1900s. Now healthy, young forests are again threatened by

housing and other development, as well as deer overpopulation and

invasive plant species. New Jersey's forests are protected to some

degree through regional planning: in the Pine Barrens through the 1979

Pinelands Protection Act, and in the Highlands through the 2004

Highlands Water Protection and Planning Act. But in spite of New

Jersey's strong wetlands and environmental laws, forests are still

vulnerable. The " Forests on the Edge " study also highlights the fate

of America's privately owned forests. Fifty-seven percent of our

nation's forests are in the hands of private owners, with no

protection other than landowners' good intentions. Data gathered as

part of the report indicate more than 44 million acres of private

forest will see increased housing development by 2030. The trend is

expected to be particularly pervasive in the East, where most

privately owned forests are located. New Jersey's privately owned

forests need better stewardship. Without it, unchecked residential

development, over-browsing by deer and invasive plants will destroy

ecological and water conservation functions. The report on development

pressures is part of a larger Forest Service initiative that aims to

increase public awareness of the value of, and pressures on, America's

private forests, national forests and surrounding privately owned

lands.

http://www.app.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080109/OPINION/801090344/1030/OP\

INION

 

North Carolina:

 

14) Forest Supervisor Marisue Hilliard, who oversees national forests

in North Carolina, upheld an October logging decision that

environmental groups had appealed. She promised " continued dialogue "

with opponents and other potential concessions, such as cutting the

trees in stages over a decade. The agency will log trees on 212 acres

scattered among 11,225 acres in a part of Pisgah National Forest known

as the Globe. Some trees will be left standing, with increased numbers

left on tracts visible from Blowing Rock. Opposition to the logging

came swiftly after the Forest Service announced the plan in mid-2006,

and might continue. The public filed more than 1,000 comments on the

plan, most of them opposed. Concerned about the scenic impact, Blowing

Rock, Boone and Watauga County passed resolutions supporting a

federally designated scenic area that would prohibit logging. The

Southern Environmental Law Center appealed on behalf of three

environmental groups that said the logging would fell some trees

hundreds of years old. They said they might ask the courts to block

the plan. " We are fully prepared to do whatever is necessary to

prevent them from logging the Globe Forest, " said Chris Joyell of Wild

South, one of the logging opponents. Hilliard said the Forest Service

will work with opponents to minimize harm to scenic views and consider

changing the logging plan if initial cuts are more visible than

expected. Botanists will also survey old-growth trees identified by

environmentalists to see whether they should be spared.

http://www.charlotte.com/local/story/439870.html

 

15) Students and researchers from Duke University's Nicholas School of

the Environment have roamed the 8,000-plus acre watershed doing

botanical surveys as well as other research, and Dr. Norm Christensen,

dean of the Nicholas School will be present to discuss the findings.

The meeting is not a public hearing but it is open to the public and

it would be a great place for those with a genuine interest in the

future of Waynesville's watershed to come and learn about the

property. Logging — oops, did I say that? Well, yeah, logging: how

much, where, when and why — will certainly be a topic of any

management plan for the watershed. But to simply reduce the discussion

of the management, stewardship, protection, enhancement and/or public

use of 8,000 acres of diverse Southern Appalachian forest to — " are

you fer or agin logging? " — is to throw the baby out with the bath

water. The Western Carolina Forest Sustainability Initiative (WCFSI),

spearheaded by Dr. Peter Bates, associate professor of natural

resources at Western Carolina University, was commissioned by the town

in 2006 to develop a comprehensive forest management plan for the

watershed. The target date for a draft of such a plan is spring of

this year. WCFSI hosted two workshops in 2006. According to the

" Summary of Workshops to Identify Sustainability Indicators for the

Waynesville Watershed " prepared by Bates in November 2006, the

workshops were designed to: " (1) identify potential public values to

be sustained within the watershed, and (2) generate potential

indicators (measures) that would inform the town over time whether

those values were indeed being sustained. " The report noted that the

primary objective of the conservation easement conveyed to the

watershed is to, " maintain high quality water resources on the

property. "

http://www.smokymountainnews.com/issues/01_08/01_09_08/out_naturalist.html

 

Tennessee:

 

16) Dear Friends--Longtime anti-Mountaintop Removal activist,

community organizer, friend and ally Maria Gunnoe has been under some

tremendous threat to person and property as a result of courageously

standing up the coal industry. After winning a lawsuit last October

that shut down a mountaintop removal coal mining operation, Gunnoe and

others received death threats. Individuals angry with her organizing

efforts, legal challenges, and victories, have been harassing her, her

family, neighbors and friends for months. She is committed to stand

her ground and remains in her family home, but has had to implement a

variety of security measures to do so. She has been asking for

donations for her to continue these security measures. If you want

more info on what has been happening, check out this recent Boston

Globe article-- And to know more about the struggles against

mountaintop removal watch these websites: Coal River Mountain Watch ;

Ohio Valley Environmental Coalition ; Mountain Justice Summer Maria is

one of those people truly making a difference for her community and

the environment, so I am asking for people to make any kind of

donation possible to support her ($5, $10, $20 etc etc). I'm doing

this and thought others might want to too. If you want to donate for

the security fund, please send a check to or money order to: Maria

Gunnoe PO Box 46 Bob White, WV 25028

http://bulletins.myspace.com/index.cfm

 

USA:

 

 

17) " We are glad the Bush administration has thrown in the towel. The

national forest planning rules are like the Constitution for our

national forests, and the Bush administration tried to throw out the

Bill of Rights, " said Trent Orr of Earthjustice, who argued the case

before Judge Hamilton. " The Bush rule made any wildlife provisions in

forest management plans aspirational, not mandatory. Our wildlife

deserve better than a hope-and-a-prayer planning system. " Judge

Hamilton found that Bush administration officials had bypassed legally

required environmental review and endangered species protections in

creating a new management system for the national forests that

eliminated enforceable environmental protections from the forest

planning process. Judge Hamilton also ruled that the administration

had sprung its final forest planning rules on the public without

sufficient notice of the paradigm shift that the rules accomplished.

Her ruling prohibits the " implementation and utilization " of the Bush

rules nationwide. The National Forest Management Act requires the

Forest Service to protect wildlife in the national forests and to

allow citizens to participate fully in management decisions. The Bush

rules invalidated the 1982 standards for national forest management

instituted by Ronald Reagan that protected species and required public

review of the environmental impacts of proposed national forest plans

governing timber harvest levels and natural resource protection. The

court's invalidation of the Bush rules is a strong signal that full

public involvement in decisions regarding their public forests must be

restored. Earthjustice, represented Defenders of Wildlife, The

Wilderness Society, the Sierra Club and Vermont Natural Resources

Council, in the legal challenge to the Bush administration rule

changes. http://www.commondreams.org/news2008/0108-08.htm

 

Canada:

 

18) With enough trees to cover 2,000 football fields at stake, London

developers and environmentalists are bracing for a showdown next week

over how much forest will be protected in the Forest City. Next week's

hearing before the Ontario Municipal Board has a twist. Facing

developers with deep pockets to hire lawyers and experts, former city

councillor Sandy Levin doesn't want to see city lawyers out-gunned --

so he'll spend as much as $70,000 to defend the city's trees. " At the

(municipal board), the gloves come off and community interests don't

always come out on top, " Levin said. The punches may fly at a hearing

scheduled to begin Tuesday and last three weeks. In September 2006,

city council made it much easier to designate a woodland " significant "

and protect it. Under old rules, a woodland wasn't significant unless

it rated high in at least three of several categories that include

size, composition, age, history and location. That left two of every

three woodlands of at least four hectares defenceless against

development. But new rules require only a single high rating and

protect as much as 80 per cent of woodlands -- a citywide gain of more

than 1,600 hectares. That change, passed before the 2006 civic

election with only one dissenting vote, was the single most important

step council has taken to protect the trees that lend the city its

nickname, Levin said.

http://lfpress.ca/newsstand/News/Local/2008/01/09/4759914-sun.html

 

UK:

 

19) A TEN-strong group of protesters has gathered in Norfolk Street to

fight against more tree felling in Oxford. City council park rangers

used chainsaws to cut down an 80-year-old London Plane tree this

morning, as work starts to clear the area around Westgate Car Park.

However, campaigners - some of who are already in Bonn Square - have

promised to save the remaining trees. Workmen downed tools at 11.30am

after it became clear a protest was likely. The fact that a student

gave her opinion seems to have angered some people. Posted by: Angry,

Cowley: " Couple of points to Rachel Cook, the first being that her

opinions are welcome when she ACTUALLY pays some council tax until

then she can keep quiet about what Oxford needs(and lets face it being

a student she wont be in Oxford long term), secondly if she really

wants to make a stand on this, she should go to Borneo or the amazon

rain forest in Brazil where deforestation is a genuine problem andd

will effect us all. If she actually took the time to check, she would

realise that Oxford City Council have a very green policy on removing

trees and will try and replace one when they have to chop one down. " I

wasn't aware council tax was required to make someone a British

citizen (sarcasm). Perhaps Angry, Cowley doesn't care what anyone

under 18 thinks either. Posted by: interested observer, city centre on

2:25pm today: " I guess these wasters are claiming state handouts of

some kind to get them you have to be available for work if you spend

weeks up a tree you are not are you this should be cracked down on

then see how many wasters we get up trees a water cannon might help. "

The Westgate Centre, for those who have not been to the centre of

Oxford, is one of two shopping centres there. It's rather horrible as

far as I'm concerned, being dominated by a massive JJB Sports and

Primark. It's more grotty than the Clarendon Centre, which is saying

something.

http://brennybaby.blogspot.com/2008/01/bonn-square-protest-inspires-fight.html

 

Finland:

 

20) A panel set up to consider measures to preserve southern forests

outlined its programme to Minister Kimmo Tiilikainen on Tuesday. The

plan, known as Metso II, also calls for greater protection of forest

areas under private ownership. The environmental group WWF Finland

says the proposal does not go far enough, arguing that it should cover

more state-owned woodlands. The NGO says this is essential to maintain

biodiversity in Finland's forests. It urges the establishment of new

conservation areas adjacent to existing ones in order to create larger

unified areas, which are crucial to the preservation of threatened

species. The Metso II agenda was drawn up by a working group of

bureaucrats, conservationists and forest industry representatives.

http://www.yle.fi/news/left/id79354.html

 

21) The heads of three regional forestry centres in the north of

Finland say that there is no wood shortage in the area that would make

it necessary to close down the Stora Enso pulp mill in Kemijärvi.

Stora Enso has announced plans to shut down the mill, which is located

in Finnish Lapland. According to estimates by the heads of the

regional forestry centres of Finnish Lapland, Oulu, and Kainuu, Jukka

Ylimartimo, Niilo Piisilä, and Jorma Tolonen, felling in the north

could be increased by 3.5-4.3 million cubic metres a year without

danger to the diverse use of forests, or to nature as a whole.

Ylimartimo says that in Finnish Lapland alone, felling could be

increased by 1.4 cubic metres a year, to 5.5 million cubic metres. The

estimate is based on calculations by the Finnish Forest Research

institute (METLA). About 60 per cent of the potential increase in

felling would be in private forests, and the rest in state-owned

forests. The potential increase for wood harvesting in Finnish Lapland

alone is more than the 1.35 million cubic metres of wood that the

Kemijärvi pulp mill uses in a year. " Felling could be gradually

increased, but most intensely only after five to ten years. Otherwise

the diverse use of the forests would suffer " , says Hannu Jokinen,

director of Metsähallitus - the state enterprise that administers

state-owned land and water areas. " In my view, Stora Enso has not

given the real reasons why it decided to close down the Kemijärvi

mill. There has never been a shortage of wood there, nor is there in

Kemi " , says Professor Matti Kärkkäinen of the University of Joensuu.

http://www.hs.fi/english/article/Forestry+centres+wood+shortage+no+reason+to+clo\

se+down+Kemij%

C3%A4rvi+mill/1135233143751

 

Iran:

 

22) Iranian cultural officials have announced the decision to register

Qeshm Island's Hara forests as a UNESCO natural heritage site. Iran's

Cultural Heritage, Handicrafts and Tourism Organization said that the

registration is scheduled for 2009. The Hara Forests commonly refer to

the mangrove forests on Qeshm Island and in the Persian Gulf, which

serve as an important ecological resource. The tree is locally known

as 'hara' or 'harra', which is scientifically named Avicennia marina

after the renowned Iranian physician, Avicenna. Hara forests are major

habitats for migratory birds, reptiles, fish, and arthropods and

bivalves. http://www.presstv.ir/detail.aspx?id=38129 & sectionid=351020108

 

Africa:

 

23) If the African savannah were to lose elephants, giraffes, and

other large grazing mammals, there would be unexpected ecological

effects all the way down to the ants and acacia trees of the plains,

suggests a new study. On half of the plots, large herbivorous mammals

have been fenced out since 1995. On the other half, herbivores still

roam freely. In plots without herbivores, the trees produced less

nectar and fewer hollow thorns, presumably because they needed less

protection. Sure enough, the most beneficial species of ant,

Crematogaster mimosae, was 30% less common on trees in these plots.

Instead, it was replaced by a second ant, C. sjostedti, which harms

the trees by encouraging attack by a stem-boring beetle. As a result,

trees on the herbivore exclusion plots grew more slowly and were more

likely to die than trees on control plots. Even C. mimosae becomes

less " friendly " on the exclusion plots. Left with less food and

housing, it stops attacking invaders and begins tending sap-sucking

insects, again to the detriment of its host. The result has sobering

implications for conservation. Large mammals are especially vulnerable

to habitat loss and encroachment by human settlements, and their

numbers are declining over much of Africa. If the decline continues,

far more than the mammals themselves could be at risk, the study

suggests. " Make a major perturbation and you're likely to see ripple

effects that you might not have expected, " says Robert Pringle, a

member of the study team at Stanford University in California, US.

http://environment.newscientist.com/article/dn13169-elephants-keep-ants-in-harmo\

ny-with-tree-ho

sts.html

 

Cameroon:

 

 

24) As an Internationaly known high realist Wildlife Artist, both my

wife and I have just returned home from an intense one month

expedition deep into the heart of the Cameroon,Lebialem Highland

jungles, in search of the 'most' endangered 'Cross River Gorilla' (250

- 300 alive in Africa) bringing International awareness to its near

extinction by my photographing, sketching, studying and painting a

'first ever' picture of this extraordinary Gorilla as well as viable

help toward the villages and children. At this time we are arranging

our gathered information and amazing video and photo footage and would

like to ask of your possible interest and if you may know of other

groups of the same in this request. Our trip is highly mediated

Internationally, bringing with it great needed attention toward the

Gorillas,Primates and the local Folks in co-existence. For your

possible interest please review the information videos at youtube.com

Searchwords: " Cross River Gorilla " and art-for-africa.net and of

course I would be very pleased to inform you much further upon this

request. Thankyou ever so much for your kind consideration. Warm

wishes into this New Year Daniel Taylor WNAG, HD

http://www.danieltaylor.ca

 

Colombia:

 

25) Colombia's cloud forests are jewels of biodiversity in the Andes

Mountains — as rich in species as the Amazon, although only 1/14th the

size in total area. But at least 50 percent of these biological

treasure troves have been cut down by neighboring cattle ranchers who

need new grazing land — endangering the habitat of animals found

nowhere else on Earth. So The Nature Conservancy and partners are

introducing the ranchers to new farming methods that could save the

cloud forests — and increase ranchers' profits as well. " It is a

unique chance for my children, it is a benefit for us, for our

community, " says local rancher Aristóbulo Infante. The project centers

on Encino, a village 125 miles north of the Colombian capital of

Bogota. Encino — like many villages in the Colombian Andes — is

relatively poor. Most families depend on their cows' milk and meat for

subsistence and trade. Small-scale ranchers have been cutting down the

nearby cloud forests of endangered Humboldt oak and converting it to

grazing land. The practice has emperiled not just the oak, but habitat

for rare fauna such as the Black Inca hummingbird, the spectacled

bear, and the black-gorgoted quail. The Nature Conservancy teamed up

with Fundación Natura, a Colombian conservation organization, and the

USAID Parks-in-Peril Project to introduce Encino ranchers to new

methods and technologies that could make farming more than 125,000

acres of their lands less destructive and more productive: 1) Planting

high-protein grasses so the cattle can graze on far less land and

still consume plenty of calories; 2) Building " live fences " made of

living trees instead of metal wire or wood so that ranchers can create

habitat corridors for local wildlife and allow soil and natural

vegetation to regenerate; 3) Planting trees that the ranchers can

later chop down for firewood and avoid harvesting any more endangered

Humboldt oak; and 4) constructing water tanks for cattle and fencing

off rivers and streams to keep cattle from eroding riverbanks and

polluting waters with excessive silts and soils.

http://www.nature.org/wherewework/southamerica/colombia/work/art22370.html

 

Guyana:

 

26) Guyana has awarded a 988,4000-acre logging concession to a U.S.

forestry company, reports the Associated Press. Simon & Shock

International, a company based in South Haven, Michigan, will spend

$26 million developing the concession, which lies in the near the

Brazilian border. Timber harvesting will commence once the first

completes an environmental impact study and a tree inventory. The

announcement comes just two months after Guyana's President, Bharrat

Jagdeo, offered up the country's forests as a giant carbon offset to

counter climate change. At the time, President Jagdeo told The

Independent, " We can deploy the forest against global warming and,

through the UK's help, it wouldn't have to stymie development in

Guyana. We are a country with the political will and a large tract of

standing forest. I'm not a mercenary, this is not blackmail and I

realize there's no such thing as a free lunch. I'm not just doing this

just because I'm a good man and want to save the world, I need the

assistance. " Globally, deforestation and land use change accounts for

15-20 percent of total emissions, a larger source of greenhouse gases

than the entire transportation sector.

http://news.mongabay.com/2008/0109-guyana.html

 

Brazil:

 

27) Brazil's first government auction of commercial logging rights in

the Amazon, part of an effort to end illegal deforestation, lured

eight bidders. The Environment Ministry will start reviewing the bids

today from companies seeking to explore 96,360 hectares (238,100

acres) of national forestland over 40 years, said Tasso de Rezende

Azevedo, head of Brazil's National Forestry Service. The forestry

service expected the rights to sell for a minimum of 2.8 million reais

($1.6 million) a year. The auction marks the first time the Brazilian

government has granted licenses for commercial logging on public

forestland, Azevedo said. It's part of an effort to reduce illegal

deforestation of the Amazon rainforest, which spans nine nations and

covers 5 percent of the world's land. ``This is our first test,''

Azevedo said in a phone interview from Brasilia. The ministry's plan

``allows us to auction one million hectares this year.'' Only

Brazilian companies were allowed to bid to explore 40 percent of the

Jamari National Forest, in the northern state of Rondonia. The area,

divided into three blocks, can produce about 2.9 million cubic meters

of wood a year, the forestry service said. As much as 80 percent of

all logging in Brazil's Amazon is illegal, environmental group

Greenpeace said on its Web site. Brazil has 193 million hectares of

national registered forests, 92 percent of which are in the Amazon.

The rate of deforestation declined by 20 percent from August 2006

though July of last year, compared with the same period a year

earlier, the Environment Ministry said in a Dec. 6 report. The winning

bidders in today's auction will be able to explore and sell wood,

seeds and fruits, though they can't trade mineral or animal products

or search for water resources. The deadline to submit a bid was today,

and Brazil hasn't set a date to announce the auction results, Azevedo

said.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601086 & sid=avutZy9YbBLI & refer=latin_ame\

rica

 

India:

 

28) The forests act as coastal embankment. This vegetation has long

served the coastal communities with shelter, food, woods, fuel, timber

etc. Besides, the mangrove forest is considered a sanctuary of

fisheries diversity. But it is a matter of great regret that some

unscrupulous elements under the shelter of political parties are

looting these resources. If the trend of clearing the green belt along

the coast continues, then soon the low-lying southern areas will go

under water. The matter deserves immediate attention. Recently, the

cyclone Sidr ravaged our country, especially the south-western region

with heavy loss of lives --more than three thousand. Obviously, we

were introduced with the natural calamities such as flood, tidal

surge, cyclone, drought etc from time immemorial. Many dreadful and

devastating tidal bulges hit this delta with great force and caused a

lot of suffering to the people, particularly the poor coastal

community. We have to take preparatory measurers, both short and long

term, to diminish the loss. The destruction was minimised due to the

presence of the Sundarbans, the world's largest mangrove forest.

http://www.thedailystar.net/story.php?nid=18403

 

Vietnam:

 

29) Scarcity of land is driving forest destruction in the Central

Highland's Dak Nong Province, about 230km northwest of HCM City.

Although felling last year was less than 2006 – 200ha against 325 ha –

the situation would get worse unless urgent action was taken, said

provincial Agriculture and Rural Development Department deputy

director Vu Minh Khoi. " The people destroying the forests are mostly

migrants from northern Viet Nam who come to Dak Nong to settle and use

slash-and-burn cultivation for their rice, " he said. People arriving

from neighbouring provinces, such as Binh Phuoc, Lam Dong, Dong Nai,

who want to farm but cannot because land in their own region is

limited and expensive, add to the pressure for more trees to be

felled. Dak Nong's residents, especially the minority people,

immediately oblige the land hunters and destroy forest to sell land.

The deforestation is now so prevalent, it threatens food security. The

Agriculture and Rural Development Department deputy director said

inefficient forestry management was the major reason for the

destruction. Forestry companies are each allotted 10,000-50,000ha and

staff shortages mean that just one person is responsible for the

protection of about 1,000ha. But rationalisation of the department's

forestry management office last year has had encouraging results. The

office's deputy director, Do Ngoc Duyen, said: " Our policy is to ask

the plantation companies to take responsibility for the protection and

control of the forests. " The province is also following the Viet Nam

Government programme of having local people use the forest to create

jobs and revenue for themselves. Of the province's 369,000ha of

forest, 6,000ha has been distributed in this way and it's planned for

the locals to have responsibility for 50 per cent of the forest by

2010. The remainder will go to the forest companies.

http://vietnamnews.vnagency.com.vn/showarticle.php?num=01AGR080108

 

China:

 

30) The forest corps of China's armed police force have put out over

2,800 forest fires since 1999, said Vice-Premier Hui Liangyu, at

Tuesday's commemoration of the 60th anniversary of the establishment

of the forest corps. In addition, the corps has joined hands with

local police and government departments to crack down on illegal

cutting of trees, illegal hunting of wild animal, and smuggling of

wild plants and logs, according to Hui, who is also member of the

Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central

Committee. In his speech, Hui spoke highly of the important role of

the forest corps in preventing forest fire control, protecting forest

resources and developing the forest industry over the past decades.

Over the past 60 years, the corps has developed into a task force

armed with modern equipment, and it has " well accomplished the sacred

mission endowed by the Party and the people, " he noted. The corps has

developed 36 kinds of fire-fighting equipment and logistic equipment

by its own, according to the vice premier. Also present at the

ceremony was Jia Zhibang, director-in-general of the State

Headquarters for Forest Fire Control, minister of the State Forestry

Administration, and first political commissar of the forest corps.

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-01/09/content_7388276.htm

 

Philippines:

 

31) Are we locking stable doors long after the horses bolt? That's how

people, numbed by unrelenting deforestation, reacted to the news

report that, after 15 years of bickering, the United Nations adopted a

" Non-Legally Binding Instrument on All Types of Forests. Politicians

here smudge significant reports. Pardoned plunderer Joseph Estrada

" vowed to expose grafters " in a book his ghost writers haven't yet

stitched. That bagged the evening news lead, ahead of police blotter

sleaze. The story about 183 nations agreeing to curb a suicidal 5

percent per decade deforestation rate landed in an inside page below

the fold. The UN General Assembly approved the new instrument on Dec.

17. It saw light here 22 days later. That came in a Department of

Foreign Affairs statement on provisions Philippine Permanent

Representative Hilario Davide cobbled into the document. Yet, our

nerves are still raw from deaths of kith and kin in floods cascading

from denuded mountains. Corpses in the provinces of Quezon, Aurora,

Leyte, Surigao underscore what dull statistics tell: In 1575, forests

blanketed 27.5 million hectares. This had been razed to less than a

fifth in 2001. That sliver continues to dwindle. Ask Sen. Juan

Ponce-Enrile. His firm, San Jose Timber Corp., logs within 97,770

hectares, straddling protected zones of the country's last old-growth

forest in Samar. In the 1950s the Philippines pranced as a " prima

donna " of Asian timber trade. " In its virgin state, Philippine forests

were among the most commercially viable in the world, with outstanding

yields of high-quality, easily-accessible timber, " notes " Asia-Pacific

Forestry: Towards 2010. " But concessions were recklessly parceled out

in the 1960s and 1970s. They surged to blanket more than a third of

the country's land area. Loggers cut as if there was no tomorrow. Log

exports crested in the late '60s at 10 million metric tons yearly --

and then nosedived.

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

111378

 

Indonesia:

 

32) Illegal land clearing on Indonesia's Sumatra island by one of

Asia's biggest pulp and paper companies is threatening Indonesia's

forests and their inhabitants, according to allegations by

environmentalists Tuesday. Asia Pulp and Paper (APP) and affiliates

are allegedly clearing land and building an access road outside their

legal concessions in the Bukit Tigapuluh area of Sumatra's Jambi

province, a coalition of five environmental groups said in a statement

accompanying a new joint report. 'From our surveys and other NGO

surveys we know this is a very critical habitat for tigers, elephants

and recently introduced orangutans,' Desmarita Murni, a campaigner

with WWF, one of the groups, was quoted by Agence France-Presse as

saying. Bukit Tigapuluh is one of only two viable habitats for

Sumatran elephants, along with Tesso Nilo forest in neighbouring Riau

province, which is also under threat, Murni said. Satellite images in

November 2007 showed 20,000 hectares had already been illegally

cleared by APP and related companies, Murni said. Murni said some of

the areas are still being auctioned off by the government, and are not

yet legally open for clearing. APP and affiliates are also breaking

the law by creating forest plantations near vital watershed

environments, she said. The groups are requesting that APP observe a

moratorium on land clearing and carry out an impact study on the

environmental importance of the forest area, which is also home to

indigenous peoples who rely on the forest for their livelihood. APP

and affiliated companies are already facing an Indonesian national

police investigation into illegal logging in Riau. APP is observing a

moratorium on land clearing in that province while the investigation

continues.

http://www.hemscott.com/news/latest-news/item.do?newsId=57266946916301

 

Papua New Guinea:

 

33) The felling of forest on the island of New Britain badly affected

21 bird species, including 16 found nowhere else in the world such as

the slaty-mantled sparrowhawk, New Britain bronzewing and black

honey-buzzard, according to the Royal Society for the Protection of

Birds. Papua New Guinea won applause from delegates of more than 180

countries at the climate talks in Bali when its Harvard-educated

delegate, Kevin Conrad, told the United States: " If you are not

willing to lead, then get out of the way. " Mr Conrad was a leading

advocate of the agreement to negotiate a global treaty on avoiding

rainforest destruction which was agreed in Bali. However, Dr Derek

Wall, the Green party's principal speaker, condemned the Papua New

Guinea government for its decision to log practically most of Woodlark

island, part of the Trobriand chain, to support the oil palm biofuel

industry. A Malaysian company, Vitroplant, has been granted permits by

the PNG government to begin clearing 70 per cent of the rainforests on

biodiversity rich Woodlark Island, some 150,000 acres, in order to

establish an oil palm plantation. Dr Wall said: " In my view the Papuan

government have gone from green heroes to eco zeros. Meanwhile, the

satellite images of damage in New Britain, published in the journal

Biological Conservation, prompted conservationists to call for urgent

action to protect what remains of rainforest there. Graeme Buchanan of

the RSPB, the paper's lead author, said: " The area is unique and

should be better protected and managed. " We think the rate of

deforestation is accelerating and is already higher than the average

for South-East Asia. " The demand for timber and palm oil is likely to

be driving this destruction and if nothing is done soon, some of New

Britain's endemic species could disappear for good. " Logging in the

last 20 years has already left at least 10 birds close to extinction

and if the rate of deforestation continues, all forest below 200m will

be gone by 2060. "

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/main.jhtml?xml=/earth/2008/01/08/eapapua108.xml

 

New Zealand:

 

34) Actor Dominic Monaghan (Lord of the Rings Trilogy, The Purifiers,

Spivs, Shooting Livien) employs his international stardom by becoming

Spokesperson for Project Last Stand, an international effort bringing

attention to the current state of the world's forests and raising

funds by organizing a celebrity charity auction. The proceeds from the

auction will support forest groups who are buying unprotected forests

and planting trees worldwide. Among the featured charities is the Nga

Uruora Kapiti Project, an organization dedicated to the restoration of

native forest habitats along the Kapiti Coast, north of Wellington.

They are currently planting trees and restoring native bush between

Paekakariki and Pukerua Bay. " We are cutting down the equivalent of

eleven football pitches of rainforest a day that is not being

replaced. When I was told this, I was completely horrified. " - Dominic

Monaghan, The Lord of the Rings Fan Club Official Movie Magazine

Monaghan is an active environmentalist, enjoys the outdoors, monkeys

and football. For more information about Project Last Stand Contact:

Project Last Stand http://www.lichenjune.com/LastStand

http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PO0311/S00149.htm

 

35) The 170m long rainforest treetops and stream side nature walk

includes about 30m of boardwalk that takes visitors 6m up into the

tree canopy for a bird's eye view of some of New Zealand's native

forest. Not one tree needed to be cut down in the process, something

about which Mr Hamlett is very proud. " We had a treetop walk planned

for a long time. The track was designed around the existing landscape

so we did not have to remove any trees or damage the site in any way.

" Even the supplejack was moved out of the way rather than cut down. We

wanted to keep it as natural as possible. " Mr Hamlett said the walk

introduced visitors to the different types of flora and fauna in a

typical North Island rainforest and added another dimension to the

park. " People get to see the different types of trees such as the

rata, kahikatea, rimu and tawa. Some of these trees are up to 200

years old. " They can also stop and listen to the bellbirds and tui

that live in the forest of the Mamaku Ranges that join the park. "

Rotorua resident Craig Gebert, who likes to take out-of-town friends

to some of the local attractions, was impressed with the new walkway

on his first visit to Paradise Valley Springs.

http://www.dailypost.co.nz/localnews/storydisplay.cfm?storyid=3760160 & thesection\

=localnews & the

subsection= & thesecondsubsection=

 

World-wide:

 

36) The Rainforest Foundation UK has launched Congo Jones and the

Loggers of Doom, an online game challenging players to safeguard the

planet's last rainforest frontier. Congo Jones' mission comes as the

Congolese rainforest - the second largest on the planet after the

Amazon - is under the carving knife. An area the size of France is at

risk. Players are invited to jump logs, climb waterfalls and evade

chainsaws to help forest peoples save their lands before it's too

late. " The game presents a very serious issue in an interactive way so

that players want to take action to stop the carve-up of the Congo

rainforest, " said Helen Brownstone, Head of Fundraising and

Communications at the Rainforest Foundation.

http://www.gameplanet.co.nz/mag.dyn/News/12389.html

 

37) Composed of a network of autonomous and associate offices, the WWF

works in 100 countries, with approximately 4,000 staff worldwide, and

is supported by five million members (1.2 million in the United

States). The International WWF is headquartered in Gland, Switzerland;

the headquarters of the autonomous U.S. World Wildlife Fund is in

Washington, D.C. The WWF estimates that 83% of its spending is

directed to worldwide conservation activities. In late 2005, WWF-US,

in consultation with its European counterparts, embarked on a 10-year

plan to conserve a priority portfolio of 19 places ranging from the

Amazon to the Yangtze and including the world's largest and most

intact tropical forests, the three most diverse freshwater systems in

the world, the most diverse coral reefs on earth, the world's most

biologically significant desert and the world's most productive

fishery. According to Roberts, the WWF has to limit its focus to those

priorities in order to make a significant impact. Otherwise, he said,

" You condemn yourself to do just little bits and pieces. " The

organization is currently in the middle of the " painful " process of

" exfoliating " those projects not on the priority list, spinning off

programs to other conservation groups, for example. Within each

priority project, the WWF wants to create local programs -- with local

leaders. " You listen, " said Roberts. " You don't impose the strategy

from above. You let the strategy emerge from local conditions. "

http://knowledge.wharton.upenn.edu/article.cfm?articleid=1875 & jsessionid=9a30b1f\

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