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No Need to Despair on Biodiversity

By IDN Environment Desk

(IDN) – Humankind will suffer annual losses of ‘natural capital’ valued at between 1.3 to 3.1 trillion Euros, if ‘business as usual’ deforestation and land use change continue, according to United Nations’ latest estimates. These stupendous figures exceed the total financial capital lost to Wall Street and City banks during 2008, their worst year in history.

The calculation has been made by the TEEB project of the UN Environment Programme’s Green Economy Initiative in the lead-up to the 10th Conference of Parties (COP10) of the UN Convention on Biodiversity (CBD) from October 18 to 29 in Nagoya, Japan.

The CBD is one of the three Rio Conventions, which emerged from the UN Conference on Environment and Development, popularly known as the Earth Summit, in June 1992 in Rio, the second largest city of Brazil.

“A central concern of our project TEEB (The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity) is the economic invisibility of natural capital — the inability of our dominant economic model to recognize economic value delivered by nature to society,” says Pavan Sukhdev, special adviser to UNEP’s Green Economy Initiative.

Biodiversity and ecosystem services have conventionally been seen as public goods: enough for everyone and available to everyone. These include clean air, fresh water, species richness, and numerous other ecosystem services that come from forests.

“But many of these forests and their goods and services are now threatened with losses or scarcities,” writes Sukhdev in the IUCN Forest Conservation Programme Newsletter titled ‘arborvitae’.

“The cornucopian assumption of abundant and unfettered availability of these ‘public goods’ simply does not reflect the harsh reality. Ongoing losses of natural areas are significant, and their impact on human welfare benefits is palpable,” writes Sukhdev.

From common people to national governments, there is a lack of understanding of the finite nature of natural ‘public goods’, of their contribution to the economy, and of their larger significance in maintaining human wellbeing.

TEEB explains that the problems often lie with open access to natural resources, coupled with unclear property rights and the lack of applicable national laws or effective international treaties. Together, these effects lead to depletion of biodiversity and ecosystem services, in a race to the bottom called “the tragedy of the commons”.

For Sukhdev there is no doubt that within this exploitative and unsustainable framework, it is the poor who suffer most as their livelihoods depend heavily on environmental resources.

The long-term purpose of TEEB is to bring together and communicate the best available scientific and economic analysis on the economics of ecosystems and biodiversity.

“Through this exercise, our goal is to help policy-makers, administrators, businesses and citizens to formulate responses to address the losses we see all around us. These actions collectively have the power to halt and reverse the losses of natural capital and to improve well-being for humanity, especially the poor,” writes Sukhdev.

TEEB has released a number of reports on the subject, starting May 2008. More are planned ahead of the CBD — for a range of decision-makers or ‘end-users’.

TEEB reports for policy-makers and administrators analyze many examples of successful incentive structures, subsidy reforms, community based conservation schemes, effective protected areas, payments for ecosystem services, and new market mechanisms for rewarding ecosystem benefits.

TEEB is also working closely with the business world to identify their main opportunities, risks, and disclosure requirements, which will be condensed into a report for business. These sets of reports and their outreach will be strong steps towards reducing the economic invisibility of ecosystems and biodiversity.

MESSAGE STARTING TO GET THROUGH

Sukhdev feels that the message is starting to get through. As an example, biodiversity was on the agenda at this year’s World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland. Over half of the World Economic Forum’s 75 Global Agenda Councils evaluating global risks (for example, freshwater scarcity, food scarcity, migration, nutrition, pandemics, catastrophic events, illicit trade, etc.) recognized ecosystem and biodiversity losses as key underlying drivers.

“As this awareness outside the conservation sector grows, change will come,” writes Sukhdev, adding: “There are numerous examples where policy initiatives of national governments and investments by the private sector are changing this dynamic by rewarding unrecognized benefits.”

In Costa Rica for example, payments for environmental services are virtually a country-wide strategy for forest and biodiversity conservation as well as sustainable development. Private corporations are increasingly seeing value in biodiversity preservation and recognizing the interconnectivity with long-term business durability.

Insurance firms and shipping companies are financing the reforestation of the Panama Canal to restore freshwater flow and avoid increased shipping premiums caused by canal closures.

In Guyana, a private equity firm has bought the rights to 20 per cent of the value of environmental services from a 370,000 hectare rainforest reserve anticipating that its carbon storage, water storage, biodiversity maintenance, and rainfall regulation services will only become more valuable and be recognized.

According to Sukhdev, strong opportunities exist for governments to capture the worth of biodiversity, generate revenue streams internally and through international agreements, and create appropriate domestic institutional arrangements to protect it.

“National governments have the responsibility to effectively integrate conservation of resources into environmental and forestry policies and beyond, into finance and planning agendas of the country,” writes UNEP’s special adviser.

“Governments should further provide fiscal or other incentives for people to encourage participation from a diverse set of stakeholders that can change the common property exploitative design of public goods and inspire innovation in the environmental sector,” he adds.

Tropical forests will be key to implementing this paradigm shift, predicts Sukhdev. Internationally, REDD (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation in Developing Countries) plus is a game-changing mechanism seeking to compensate developing countries for the global carbon mitigation benefits of tropical forests.

With these forests being mostly located in developing countries, forest carbon becomes a prime opportunity to spearhead new international payments for ecosystem services (IPES), Sukhdev points out.

However, TEEB is not alone in stressing that a key priority is to develop eligibility and performance criteria for forest carbon initiatives that reflect not only their carbon capture or emission reduction potential, but also a range of ecological, socioeconomic and biodiversity criteria that more fully reflect the true economic value and development role of forests.

“If agreement can be reached on these issues, and we are hopeful that this will happen expeditiously, then we can collectively start to recognize the real value of our public goods, and address biodiversity loss and the tragedy of the commons,” Sukhdev concludes with an optimistic note.

[Ed-Apols for full quote]

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Temporary cap in place-now what for the Gulf?

By ALLEN G. BREED, VICKI SMITH and HOLBROOK MOHR for AP

NEW ORLEANS-After three long months, the bleeding from the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico has been finally, mercifully stanched. But in so many ways, the prognosis remains uncertain.

Which species will rebound, and which have been pushed beyond the brink? Has the oil accelerated the die-off of marshlands that protect one of America’s great cities and make this the nation’s second most-productive fishing region? What effect will the BP spill have on the future of deep-sea drilling — at once boon and bane — in the Gulf?

And, of more immediate concern to people along the nation’s southern coast, where will the millions of as-yet uncollected, unburned, unseen gallons of oil from the blown-out Deepwater Horizon well end up?

Second-generation Plaquemines Parish resident Sandy Reno isn’t sure she wants to wait around to find out the answers.

“I’m ready to pack up and leave,” says Reno, 43, whose shrimper husband, like so many others along this coast, is now dependent on cleanup work from the company held responsible for the disaster. “When you’ve had enough, you’ve had enough. I’ve had enough already.”

Just as the stumbling federal response to Hurricane Katrina five years ago exposed not just chinks, but spider web networks of fissures in our national armor, the failure to prevent and then quickly stop the spill has shaken many people’s faith in American might.

“We’re a superpower — the United States,” New Orleans chef and sometime fishing guide Eric Schutzman said recently as he took a break from carving up a batch of black drum and redfish caught in an unclosed section of Black Bay. “We put a man on the moon. You’d think we’d have enough brilliant minds to get it all cleaned up and get on with it.”

Since the Deepwater Horizon exploded on April 20 and sank 50 miles off the tip of Louisiana, as much as 184 million gallons of crude have hemorrhaged into the gulf.

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BP oil spill could make Gulf hurricane season 'devastating'

By Pete Spotts in Hammond, Louisiana for the Christian Science Monitor

Forecasters expect an active hurricane season, raising concern that a storm could push more of the BP oil spill ashore. The Gulf’s biggest hurricanes are generally later in the season, however.

The 2010 Atlantic hurricane season opens today, and with it concerns over the effect the BP oil spill could have on coastal ecosystems if a major storm moves into the northern Gulf of Mexico and reaches land.

On one hand, hurricane forecasters and federal emergency officials say the first concern in any hurricane that makes landfall will be people. Yet healthy wetlands along the Gulf Coast – mainly west of the Mississippi Delta – are widely seen as a first line of defense against the storm surges tropical cyclones push ahead of them.

Marshes in and around the Delta region are already under assault. Sea levels are rising, and the widespread use of levees along the Mississippi River has starved the wetlands of fresh sediment the Mississippi River once delivered.

If oil from the Deepwater Horizon blowout invades the wetland soils, it can kill off marsh grasses at the roots, increasing the rate of erosion, ecologists say. With chemical dispersants mixed in, the brew also would be toxic to small marine animals that form a vital part of a marsh’s food chain.

A range of seasonal hurricane forecasters have indicated that this season is likely to be significantly more active than normal. Both the federal government and BP, meanwhile, have suggested that the leak might not be stopped before a relief well is completed in August.

“A hurricane in the Gulf of Mexico this year would be devastating,” says Qin Chen, an associate professor of civil and environmental engineering at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge.

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Watch Blue Gold: World Water Wars (2008)

Watch a movie

Blue Gold: World Water Wars (2008)

Wars of the future will be fought over water as they are over oil today, as the source of human survival enters the global marketplace and political arena. Corporate giants, private investors, and corrupt governments vie for control of our dwindling supply, prompting protests, lawsuits, and revolutions from citizens fighting for the right to survive. Past civilizations have collapsed from poor water management. Can the human race survive?

Download the full movie here

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Biodiversity Losses Accelerate as Ecosystems Approach Tipping Points

ENS

NAIROBI, Kenya, May 11, 2010 (ENS) – Unless “radical and creative action” is taken quickly to conserve the variety of life on Earth, natural systems that support lives and livelihoods are at risk of collapsing, finds a new biodiversity report released today by two United Nations environmental bodies.

The Global Biodiversity Outlook 3 warns that massive further loss of biodiversity is becoming increasingly likely, and with it, the loss of many essential services to human societies as several “tipping points” are approached, in which ecosystems shift to less productive states from which it may be difficult or impossible to recover.

Earlier assessments have underestimated the potential severity of biodiversity loss, because the impacts of passing tipping points have not previously been taken into account, finds the report, presented at an intergovernmental scientific meeting in Nairobi that is working towards a new 10-year strategy that will help countries halt and reverse this downward spiral.

One tipping point is the dieback of large areas of the Amazon forest due to the interactions of climate change, deforestation and fires. This would have consequences for the global climate and regional rainfall and would lead to widespread species extinctions.

Also analyzed is the shift of many freshwater lakes and other inland water bodies to eutrophic or algae-dominated states, caused by the buildup of nutrients. This leads to widespread fish kills and loss of recreational amenities.

Another tipping point could be triggered by multiple collapses of coral reef ecosystems due to a combination of ocean acidification, warmer water leading to bleaching, overfishing and nutrient pollution. This ecosystem shift threatens the livelihoods of hundreds of millions of species directly dependent on coral reef resources.

The Global Biodiversity Outlook 3 report holds that these outcomes are avoidable if effective and coordinated action is taken to reduce the multiple pressures being imposed on plant and animals species.

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Gulf Coast fishermen brace for a man-made disaster

Louisiana’s $2.4 billion fisheries at stake

By Matt Andrejczak for MarketWatch

SAN FRANCISCO (MarketWatch) — The Gulf Coast fishing industry, financially whipped by four hurricanes since 2005, is bracing for a man-made calamity.

Oil gushing from an out-of-control well following an April 20 rig blast in the Gulf of Mexico poses a severe threat to the livelihood of Louisiana’s commercial fishers, who were allowed to get an early jump on shrimp season Thursday under a special state-government order.

On Friday, the spreading slick reached coastal wetlands near the mouth of the Mississippi River, prompting Louisiana health officials to close six oyster harvesting areas. Read oil spill taints Louisiana wetlands.

With the spill still spreading, it’s impossible to estimate its eventual impact on local fisheries. But the stakes are undeniably high.

Louisiana is the No. 1 provider of shrimp, oysters, crab and crawfish in the United States, producing 33% of America’s seafood. These shellfish add $2.4 billion a year to the state’s economy, according to the Louisiana Seafood Promotion & Marketing Board.

What’s more, if the slick is not contained, it could cost many jobs. The seafood industry accounts for 1 of every 70 jobs in Louisiana.

Luck may be on their side…

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Supreme Court Rejects Michigan’s Asian Carp Lawsuit

By Steve Kellman for Circle of Blue

Michigan’s Attorney General Mike Cox is “looking at other legal avenues” to pursue the carp battle.

Michigan’s effort to bring the Asian carp fight to the U.S. Supreme Court came to an abrupt end Monday with a terse two-sentence denial from the court.

The ruling effectively ends Michigan Attorney General Mike Cox’s four-month effort to convince the nation’s highest court to wade into the legal debate over the invasive species threatening Lake Michigan. Cox sought to reopen a decades-old lawsuit against Chicago’s diversion of Lake Michigan water to force the closure of Chicago-area locks that threaten to let the carp into the freshwater body.

“The fight to protect Michigan’s jobs and environment now falls to President Obama and Congress,” Cox said in a statement. “While President Obama has turned a blind eye to the millions of Great Lakes residents who do not happen to live in his home state of Illinois, it is now up to him to save thousands of Michigan jobs and our environment.”

Asian carp have been making their way up the Mississippi and Illinois rivers for decades since being imported to clean catfish ponds in southern parts of the country, while government workers also attempted to use the fish for weed control sewage disposal. Established populations now live just a few miles from Lake Michigan, in the Illinois River and the canals that transport Chicago’s municipal waste away from the city.

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China's famed Pearl River under denim threat

By Emily Chang for CNN

Guangzhou, China (CNN) — On the banks of the Pearl River, vendors set up shop daily at the Luwei village market. Mr. Liu wanders through the stalls at dusk, selecting vegetables and fish from the local fishmonger for dinner. As the sun sets on the murky river, he marvels at the disturbing transformation of the waterway he calls home.

“The water has turned dark and black,” he says.

“People used to swim in it,” a cabbage hawker says across the market. “We know it’s polluted, but what can we do?”

The Pearl River has sustained Chinese civilization for ages, but over the last few decades, civilization has not been kind to the river. It has become a dumping ground for debris, floating among massive algae blooms and even pig carcasses. Agricultural runoff is one of the river’s biggest threats, next to industrial pollution.

The river is the lifeblood of the “world’s factory floor,” thousands of factories that produce the world’s toys, mobile phones, computers, textiles and more.

It is also the blue jean capital of the world.

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China debates whether human activity or nature is to blame for drought

By Barbara Demick, reporting from Beijing for The Los Angeles Times.

An unusually long dry season, along with deforestation, pollution and dam-building, leaves farmers struggling. In some areas, people cannot even wash their hair regularly.

The images are heart-rending, farmers kneeling over the cracked earth that looks to be straight out of a post-apocalyptic movie, the dust swirling in the wind.

But what underlies China’s worst drought in nearly a century is a matter of great debate. Is it Mother Nature or human failure?

Beyond the official explanation of “abnormal weather,” Chinese environmentalists are pointing to deforestation, pollution, dams, overbuilding and other man-made factors. Scientists are searching for clues about why rain hasn’t come in some parts of the country.

At its worst, the drought has left parched more than 16 million acres of farmland in more than four provinces, threatening the livelihood of more than 50 million farmers, according to government statistics. Up to 20 million people have been left without drinking water.

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Agencies Sign MOU Establishing "New Approach" to Hydropower, Hydroelectric, and Pumped Storage Facilities

Stoel Rives Energy Law Alert

On March 24, 2010, three federal agencies announced a Memorandum of Understanding for Hydropower (the “MOU”) that impacts developers of traditional hydropower, hydrokinetic, pumped storage, and small-scale hydropower facilities.

The Department of Energy (the “DOE”), the Department of the Interior (the “DOI”), and the Department of the Army, through the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (the “USACE”) (collectively, the “Agencies”), signed the MOU to “meet the Nation’s needs for reliable, affordable, and environmentally sustainable hydropower by building a long-term working relationship, prioritizing similar goals, and aligning ongoing and future renewable energy development efforts” between the Agencies.

The MOU comes at a time when industry representatives and eleven U.S. Senators are requesting that DOE support a $200 million appropriations request for the advancement of both conventional and advanced waterpower technologies.

In this “new approach to hydropower,” the Agencies intend to focus their collective efforts on advancing sustainable, low-impact, and small hydropower projects and promoting the goal of energy efficiency through water conservation or improved water management. Operating under the MOU, the Agencies will work together to advance four primary objectives:

• Support the maintenance and sustainable optimization of existing federal and non-federal hydropower projects;

• Elevate the goal of increased hydropower generation as a priority of each Agency to the extent permitted by their respective statutory authorities;

• Promote energy efficiency; and

• Ensure that new hydropower generation is implemented in a sustainable manner. Opportunities for Agency Collaboration

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