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IBM Eliminates Compounds from Semiconductor Manufacturing as Part of its Design for the Environment

East Fishkill, New York – IBM has announced it has eliminated all known uses of two compounds from its chip manufacturing processes as part of its design for the environment program. These compounds are perfluorooctane sulfonate (PFOS) and perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA).  
 
IBM’s design for the environment program is focused on the development and manufacture of products and technologies that are safe, energy efficient, protective of the environment and can be reused, recycled or disposed of safely. 
 
Several years ago, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, followed by the European Union and other countries, began putting in place restrictions on the manufacture and use of these chemicals in consumer products, where they were commonly uses as a stain or water repellent. Research showed they are persistent in the environment and bio-accumulative – they can build up in the environment and gradually increase in concentration over time.  
 
These compounds remain permitted for use in semiconductor manufacturing. Small amounts had been used for photolithography – the process of imprinting a chip design onto a silicon chip – and for the process that etches the chip pattern on the chip. IBM has been working over the last decade to find alternatives, and has now succeeded in removing these chemicals from its semiconductor processes.  
 
IBM prohibited the compounds’ use in the development of new materials in 2005, in new manufacturing applications in 2007, and set a goal to eliminate all uses of these chemicals by 2010 – a goal that IBM has now achieved. IBM successfully eliminated PFOS and PFOA in its wet etch processes at the end of 2008. IBM’s Vermont facility received the Vermont Governor’s Award for Environmental Excellence in Pollution Prevention for this accomplishment. IBM eliminated them in its photolithography processes as of January 31, 2010, by working with its suppliers to develop alternative formulations.
 
“Developing alternatives for these chemicals was an ambitious technological challenge,” said Michael Cadigan, General Manager, Microelectronics at IBM. “The transition to the new formulations had to be implemented and qualified across a large array of processes without impacting customer product delivery commitments. In addition, several companies in at least five countries have had access to this leadership solution through their technology development alliances with IBM.” 
 
“This achievement is another in a long line of significant initiatives and innovation at IBM that supports the company’s longstanding commitment to environmental leadership,” said Wayne Balta, Vice President, Corporate Environmental Affairs and Product Safety at IBM. “In this case, it demonstrates IBM’s proactive approach in identifying, developing and utilizing environmentally preferable materials.”     
 
 
Source: IBM.
 
 

Cities Get Common Standard for Measuring Greenhouse Gas Emissions

Rio de Janeiro, Brazil – The world’s cities now have a common method for calculating the amount of greenhouse gases produced within their boundaries. UNEP, UN-HABITAT, and the World Bank jointly launched a Global Greenhouse Gas Standard for cities at the World Urban Forum in Rio de Janeiro held on March 23.
 
City mayors, other urban leaders, businesses and civil society all recognize the need to act to reduce the impacts of climate change on cities. While measurement should not delay action, a critical requirement to support policy and access to finance is the establishment of an open, global and harmonized protocol for quantifying the GHG emissions attributable to cities and local regions.
 
“The common standard is a critical first step for cities to better understand their greenhouse gas emissions, with this knowledge cities can better target policies and inform their citizens,” said Zoubida Allaoua, World Bank Director.
 
Anna Tibaijuka, Undersecretary-General of the United Nations and Executive Director of UN-HABITAT, said, “In reducing greenhouse gas emissions, cities are part of the solution: city officials are discovering new ways to get people out of cars and into rapid transit buses; to harness the methane released by landfills and turn it into energy; to support compact urban development and not urban sprawl”.
 
The Greenhouse Gas Standard calculates emissions on a per capita basis, allowing cities to compare their performance and analyse the differences. For example, greenhouse gas emissions are 4.20 tonnes of CO2e per capita in Barcelona, Spain, 10.6 in Bangkok, Thailand, and 17.8 in Calgary, Canada. But emissions vary widely among cities depending on their primary energy source, climate, means of transportation and urban form. New York, a high-density city in the US, produces 10.4 tonnes of CO2e per capita while Denver, another US-city with a much lower density, produces more than double that at 21.3 tonnes. The new common standard also allows cities to compare their emissions over time, across cities and in specific sectors such as energy, transportation, or waste.
 
The Greenhouse Gas Standard builds on and is consistent with Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) protocol and other greenhouse gas initiatives such as those by the World Resources Institute, ICLEI – Local Governments for Sustainability and the Clinton Climate Initiative. The Standard provides a common format to facilitate compilation by cities themselves, or through the academic community. It is now completed for more than 40 cities, but the goal of UNEP, UN-HABITAT and the World Bank is to eventually have all cities around the world represented.
 
UNEP, UN-HABITAT, and the World Bank recognize the importance of climate change for cities and are working jointly to produce tools, programming and resources for cities as they respond to climate change.
 
Achim Steiner, Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations and UNEP Executive Director, said, “Cities can be a key catalyst towards the international aim of keeping a global temperature rise to under 2 degrees C by 2050. The Copenhagen Accord, for which 110 countries representing over 80 per cent of global emissions have expressed support, remains a work in progress. There remains an ambition gap between where we are and where we need to be in 2020 – bigger cuts by cities may be one route towards bridging this divide.”
 
The Greenhouse Gas Standard for cities, released, is one of a series of tools that UNEP, UN-HABITAT and the World Bank are working on for cities. The joint work program is being carried out with the support of Cities Alliance.
 
The Greenhouse Gas Standard including a common format for conducting a Greenhouse Gas inventory is available online at: www.unep.org/urban_environment
 
 
Source: UNEP.
 
 

Future for Gorillas in Africa Getting Bleaker

Gorilla

Doha Gorillas may have largely disappeared from large parts of the Greater Congo Basin by the mid 2020s unless urgent action is taken to safeguard habitats and counter poaching, says the United Nations and INTERPOL – the world’s largest international police organization.
 
Previous projections by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), made in 2002, suggested that only 10 per cent of the original ranges would remain by 2030. These estimates now appear too optimistic given the intensification of pressures including illegal logging, mining, charcoal production and increased demand for bushmeat, of which an increasing proportion is ape meat.
 
Outbreaks of Ebola hemorrhagic fever virus are adding to concerns. These have killed thousands of great apes including gorillas and by some estimates up to 90 per cent of animals infected will die.
 
The new report, launched at a meeting of the Convention on the International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES) taking place in Qatar, says the situation is especially critical in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) where a great deal of the escalating damage is linked with militias operating in the region.
 
The Rapid Response Assessment report, entitled ‘The Last Stand of the Gorilla – Environmental Crime and Conflict in the Congo Basin’, says militias in the eastern part of the DRC are behind much of the illegal trade which may be worth several hundred million dollars a year. It says that smuggled or illegally-harvested minerals such as diamonds, gold and coltan along with timber ends up crossing borders, passing through middle men and companies before being shipped onto countries in Asia, the European Union and the Gulf.
 
The export of timber and minerals is estimated to be two to ten times the officially recorded level, and is claimed to be handled by front companies in Kenya, Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi.
 
Militias – A Key Link
 
The illegal trade is in part due to the militias being in control of border crossings which, along with demanding road tax payments, may be generating between $14 million and $50 million annually, which in turn helps fund their activities.
 
Meanwhile, the insecurity in the region has driven hundreds of thousands of people into refugee camps. Logging and mining camps, perhaps with links to militias, are hiring poachers to supply refugees and markets in towns across the region with bushmeat.
 
Achim Steiner, UN Under-Secretary General and Executive Director of the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), said, “This is a tragedy for the great apes and one also for countless other species being impacted by this intensifying and all too often illegal trade.” “Ultimately it is also a tragedy for the people living in the communities and countries concerned. These natural assets are their assets: ones underpinning lives and livelihoods for millions of people. In short it is environmental crime and theft by the few and the powerful at the expense of the poor and the vulnerable,” he added.
 
Mr. Steiner said he welcomed the involvement of INTERPOL and called on the international community to step up support for the agency’s Environmental Crime Programme. He also underlined the importance of strengthening treaties such as the Lusaka Agreement on Co-operative Enforcement Operations Directed at Illegal Trade in Wild Fauna and Flora, which operates in eight Eastern and Southern African countries in support of CITES.
 
The new Rapid Response Assessment report also recommends a greater role for MONUC, the UN peacekeeping operation in the DRC operating mainly North and South Kivu.
 
Strengthening its mandate in terms of support for park rangers and control of border crossings, in collaboration with national customs and international bodies, could go a long way to reduce the revenue-raising activities of militias and their role in the illegal trade. This in turn would bring a peace dividend for the people of the region.
 
David Higgins, Manager of the INTERPOL Environmental Crime Programme, said: “The gorillas are yet another victim of the contempt shown by organized criminal gangs for national and international laws aimed at defending wildlife. The law enforcement response must be internationally co-coordinated, strong and united, and INTERPOL is uniquely placed to facilitate this.”
 
“We are committed to combating all forms of environmental crime on a global scale. INTERPOL is mandated to do so by providing law enforcement agencies in all our 188 member countries with the intelligence exchange, operational support, and capacity building needed to combat this world-spanning crime.”
 
The report, issued during the UN’s International Year of Biodiversity, is based on scientific data, new surveys including satellite ones, interviews, investigations and an analysis of evidence supplied to the UN Security Council. It has been compiled by UNEP and partly updates its assessment of 2002 entitled ‘The Great Apes – The Road Ahead’.
 
The 2002 report said at the time that around 28 per cent, or some 204,900 square kilometres of remaining gorilla habitat in Africa, could be classed as ‘relatively undisturbed’. “If infrastructure growth continues at current levels, the area left by 2030 is estimated to be 69,900 square kilometres or just 10 per cent. It amounts to a 2.1 per cent, or 4,500 square kilometre, annual loss of low-impacted gorilla habitat across range states including Nigeria, Gabon, Cameroon and Congo,” the report said at the time.
 
Christian Nellemann, a senior officer at UNEP’s Grid Arendal Centre who was lead author of the 2002 report and who has headed up the new one, said the original assessment had underestimated the scale of the bush meat trade, the rise in logging and the impact of the Ebola virus on great ape populations. “With the current and accelerated rate of poaching for bushmeat and habitat loss, the gorillas of the Greater Congo Basin may now disappear from most of their present range within ten to fifteen years,” said Mr. Nellemann. “We are observing a decline in wildlife across many parts of the region, and also side-effects on poaching outside the region and on poaching for ivory and rhino horn, often involving poachers and smugglers operating from the Congo Basin, Uganda, Burundi and Rwanda, to buyers in Asia and beyond,” he added.
 
Ian Redmond, Envoy for the Great Ape Survival Partnership (GRASP), established by UNEP and the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), said clamping down on ape meat in the bushmeat trade would not harm local people. “Ape meat is only a tiny proportion of the million tonnes of bushmeat consumed each year in the Congo Basin, so removing it from the diet of consumers would not greatly affect their protein intake – but it would assist in halting the current decline in gorilla populations being subjected to hunting and who, given their complex social structures, are so sensitive to the killing of individuals,” he added.
 
The report does, however, contain some positive news. A new and as yet unpublished survey in one area of the eastern DRC, in the centre of the conflict zone, has discovered 750 critically endangered Eastern lowland gorillas.
 
The other good news is that the mountain gorillas in the Virungas, an area which is shared by Rwanda, Uganda and DR Congo, have survived during several periods of instability. And this is the result of trans-boundary collaboration among the three countries, including better law enforcement and benefit sharing with the local communities.
 
This is also due to the efforts of courageous park rangers who last year, for example, destroyed over 1,000 kilns involved in charcoal production in the Virunga National Park. But this has come at a price – over 190 Virunga park rangers have been killed in recent years in the line of duty, with the perpetrators thought to be militias concerned about a loss of revenue.
 
Both UNEP and INTERPOL say that significant resources and training for law enforcement personnel and rangers on the ground must be mobilized, including long-term capacity building. This includes funds for supporting and investigating transnational environmental crime in the region, including the companies concerned in Africa and beyond, all the way to the consumers.
 
The College of African Wildlife Management at Mweka, near Kilimanjaro (Tanzania) has worked with UNEP in developing new programmes for anti-poaching as part of the development of the report. The college trains rangers across the entire eastern Africa.
 
A UNEP report published in 2007 and entitled ‘The Last Stand of the Orangutan’ underlined similar threats to great apes in Asia. Since then, the Indonesian government has successfully stepped up law enforcement in many of its parks – and these improvements could be mirrored in the Congo Basin.
 
The report ‘The Last Stand of the Gorilla – Environmental Crime and Conflict in the Congo Basin’ was financed by the Government of France and the Great Ape Survival Partnership (GRASP) established by UNEP and UNESCO.
 
 
Source: UNEP

Colloquium on Biodiversity: Earth’s Most Valuable Resource – Why does it matter to Business?

Event Date: Tuesday, 27 April 2010
Location: Wildlife Institute of India, Chandrabani, Dehradun
Organized By: CII and WII
 
Introduction
 
Biodiversity – the diversity of species and ecosystems on earth – is an issue of global importance and it lies at the core of sustainable development. It forms a critical ingredient into the productivity and outputs of the global economy and forms a pillar for the quality of life of people across the world.
 
Despite its immense moral, cultural and economic value, biodiversity and its ecosystem services are being lost and degraded at an unprecedented rate as a result of anthropogenic activities. The growth of large urban areas, construction activities such as dams, buildings and roads, encroachment on vast areas of forest lands for extension of arable expanses and mining operations are examples of direct onslaughts on nature which have steadily depleted biodiversity.
 
The biodiversity impacts have substantial social and economic consequences as they result in the irrevocable damage and degradation of ecological services that people, societies and businesses depend on. Thus, without a concerted effort to protect and conserve biodiversity the entire human race would be in danger. Loss of species and habitats, wetlands conservation, wildlife trade, pollution, and climate change are concerns requiring efforts to be effectively addressed.
 
As businesses have a two-way relationship with biodiversity, encompassing both the impact of companies on biodiversity, and the impact of biodiversity on companies, they have prime responsibility & significant influence on the conservation of biological diversity. At the same time, the involvement of key policy makers in the promotion of legal and policy regimes that protect the rights of countries, individuals, communities and corporations, can assist in accomplishing the goal of biodiversity conservation and sustainable development. 
 
Therefore, in order to protect, conserve, restore biodiversity, a concerted response from governments, the business community and society is required. This Multi-stakeholder Partnership (MSP) involving governments, industry, local community, conservationists, forest departments and other user groups, may lead to win-win situation.
 
About the Event
 
With the above background and to celebrate the year 2010 as the International Year of Biodiversity, CII-ITC Centre of Excellence for Sustainable Development in association with Wildlife Institute of India (WII) is organizing the “Colloquium on Biodiversity: Earth’s Most Valuable Resource – Why does it matter to Business?” at WII’s campus at Dehradun, Uttarakhand.
 
This Colloquium will focus and deliberate on the two very specific aspects, i.e., Biodiversity: A Business Case and Sustainable Biodiversity Conservation: A Policy Road Map
 
Agenda
 
0930 – 1000 hrs: Registration
1000 – 1115 hrs: Inaugural Session
1115 – 1145 hrs: Tea/Coffee Break
1145 – 1330 hrs: Plenary Session (Biodiversity: A Business Case)
1330 – 1430 hrs: Networking Lunch
1430 – 1615 hrs: Plenary Session (Sustainable Biodiversity Conservation: A Policy Road Map)
 
All those interested are cordially invited to participate in this Colloquium on this vital subject of Biodiversity Conservation. Please note that the participation is by invitation only. There are limited seats available; hence, you are requested to kindly fill in the Reply Form and send it back to the address mentioned in the contact details below.
 
Contact Details
 
Mr. Gourav Chutani,
CII-ITC Centre of Excellence for Sustainable Development,
2nd Floor, Thapar House, 124, Janpath, 
New Delhi – 110001
Telephone: +91-11-41502301–03
Fax: +91-11-41501924/25
 
Source: CII-ITC Centre of Excellence for Sustainable Development. 

India Energy Congress 2010: Energy Challenges for a Sustainable Future

Event Date: April 6-7, 2010
Location: The Ashok, New Delhi
Organized By: World Energy Council-Indian Member Committee (WEC-IMC)
 
About WEC-IMC
 
World Energy Council (WEC) is a global organization with presence in nearly 100 countries worldwide. India is the member of this world body since 1924.
 
Indian Member Committee (IMC) of the World Energy Council works under the patronage of all energy sector ministries to proactively synergize energy sector & catalyze growth.
  • Ministry of Power
  • Ministry of Coal
  • Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas
  • Ministry of New and Renewable Energy
  • Ministry of External Affairs
With support of its member organizations in Coal, Oil & Gas Power, Thermal, Nuclear, Hydro & Renewable Sector, WEC-IMC provides a platform for intense business networking, knowledge sharing, studies and debates on concurrent energy issues.
 
About India Energy Congress
 
The India Energy Congress is the annual flagship event of WEC-IMC. India Energy Congress provides common platform to experts from all the sectors of energy to share their wisdom, thoughts & plans in an effort to chalk out the roadmap for sustainable growth in the energy sector. The first such Congress was held in 2007 on the theme, “Economic, Efficient & Environment-friendly Energy”. The next was held in 2008 and the theme was “Delivering Sustainable Energy Security”. Both were a resounding success and WEC-IMC now brings the third edition. In 2010, it is on the theme, “Energy Challenges for a Sustainable Future” at Hotel Ashok, New Delhi from April 6-7, 2010. The theme is in consonance with that of World Energy Congress to be held in Montreal, Canada in September 2010.
 
Through deliberations, IEC 2010 proposes to evolve the perspective of the Indian energy sector on issues to be raised at the World Energy Congress. It is planned to organize four round table discussions on the challenges of 4As of sustainability, namely,
  • Availability: Continuity of supply, quality and reliability of service
  • Accessibility: Meeting the demand for modern affordable energy for all
  • Acceptability: Meeting the social and environmental goals
  • Accountability: Policies, Regulation & Resources 
Programme
 
IEC 2010 will have multi-level, multi-discipline interactions. Deliberations will be flagged off by senior sector experts from energy sector, setting the tone for the day. Keynote plenary sessions will be addressed by senior bureaucrats highlighting energy issues at the macro level followed by four intense round table debates on energy issues and strategies with CEOs and energy experts on the panel. International speakers will share their country’s perspective at the Global Perspective Dialogue. IEC 2010 will, therefore, provide a unique platform to participants to get a holistic view of energy issues and high level networking forum for B2B meetings.
 
Day 1: Tuesday, 6th April 2010
 
0900 Hrs. – 1000 Hrs. 
Registration
 
1000 Hrs. – 1115 Hrs. 
Inaugural Session
 
1115 Hrs. – 1130 Hrs. 
Tea Break
 
1130 Hrs. – 1300 Hrs. 
Keynote Address Session
 
1300 Hrs. – 1400 Hrs. 
Lunch
 
1400 Hrs. – 1600 Hrs. 
Round Table-1 Challenge of Availability 
(Continuity of supply, quality and reliability of service)
 
1600 Hrs. – 1615 Hrs.
Tea Break
 
1615 Hrs. – 1815 Hrs.
Round Table -2 Challenge of Accessibility
Meeting the demand for modern affordable energy for all
 
Day 2: Wednesday, 7th April 2010
 
0930 Hrs. – 1130 Hrs.
Round Table-3 Challenge of Acceptability
Meeting the social and environmental goals
 
1130 Hrs. – 1145 Hrs.
Tea Break
 
1145 Hrs. – 1345 Hrs.
Round Table-4 Challenge of Accountability
Policies, Regulations & Resources
 
1345 Hrs. – 1445Hrs.
Lunch
 
1445 Hrs. – 1615 Hrs.
Global Perspective Dialogue
Invitees from various counties give their perspective on challenges for a sustainable energy future.
1615 Hrs. – 1630 Hrs.
Tea Break
 
1630 Hrs. – 1800 Hrs.
Valedictory Session
 
Who Should Attend
 
The conference presents a unique opportunity to the Indian business community & global fraternity to showcase their organizations, activities and B2B opportunities through delegate participation, sponsorship and advertisement.
 
Conference Fee
 
WEC-IMC Member Organizations: Rs. 5,000/US$ 125 per delegate
 
Non-Member Organizations: Rs. 10,000/US$ 250 per delegate
 
Students: Rs. 1,500/US$ 40 per delegate
 
(25% discount for four or more delegates from one organization/member committee)
 
Conference fee entitles the delegates to participation in all conference sessions, conference documentation and India energy Book 2010 (CD or Book).
 
Contact Details
 
General Manager,
World Energy Council – Indian Member Committee,
7th Floor, Core-6, SCOPE Complex,
Lodhi Road,
New Delhi – 110003
 
Phone: 011-24363719
Fax: 011-24369530
 
 
 
 
Source: India Energy Congress.
 
 

Ship Made from Reclaimed Plastic Bottles Sets Sail to Raise Awareness on Waste

San Francisco – Adventure Ecology founder and environmentalist David de Rothschild and his intrepid crew; Jo Royle, David Thomson, Olav Heyerdahl along with National Geographic filmmaker Max Jourdan and Myoo Media‘s Vern Moen set sail on Saturday, March 20, on the Plastiki, a unique 60ft catamaran engineered from approximately 12,500 reclaimed plastic bottles and srPET, a fully recyclable material.
 
An ‘off-the-grid’ vessel relying primarily on renewable energy systems, the Plastiki and her crew will journey more than 11,000 nautical miles drawing attention to the health of our oceans, in particular the colossal amounts of plastic debris, by showcasing waste as a resource and demonstrating real world solutions through the design and construction of the Plastiki.
 
The Plastiki began her adventure nearly four years ago after taking inspiration from a report issued by UNEP called ‘Ecosystems and Biodiversity in Deep Waters and High Seas’ and Thor Heyerdahl‘s epic 1947 expedition, ‘The Kon-Tiki’.
 
True to Adventure Ecology’s values, a compelling and pioneering expedition was needed that would not only inform, but would also captivate, activate and educate the world that waste is fundamentally inefficient design.
 
With more efficient design and a smarter understanding of how we use materials, principally plastic, waste can be transformed into a valuable resource, in turn helping to lessen our plastic fingerprints on the world’s oceans.
 
The Plastiki expedition took influence from the principles of ‘cradle-to-cradle’ design and biomimicry before being realized by a multifaceted team from the fields of marine science, sustainable design, boat building, architecture and material science.
 
The journey to date has generated opportunity for tremendous curiosity, discovery and innovation as well as a platform for discussion, debate and action.
 
To follow the adventure, feed your curiosity, track the crews’ individual stories, witness the challenges that our oceans and its inhabitants face and learn what you can do for our Planet, please log into the expedition’s online mission control: www.theplastiki.com for regular updates, GPS positioning, crew blogs, photography and mini-films.
 
 
Source: UNEP.
 
 

Cost Reduction Necessary to Promote Solar Energy

Bangalore – Stressing on the need to reduce cost to promote solar power, Mr. B. K. Chaturvedi, Member of Energy Planning Commission said that cost reduction should be supported by necessary guidelines so that expansion of solar program can be accelerated and sustainable development of manufacturing capacity can take place.
 
Speaking at the Interactive Session on ‘Implementing Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission’ organized by Confederation of Indian Industry (CII) in association with Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) and Ministry of Power, Chaturvedi stressed on the adoption of adequate advanced technology to alter the energy mix in India.
 
Chaturvedi made the statements during his inaugural address on 1 April 2010 in New Delhi during the launch of the first phase of the Jawaharlal Nehru National Solar Mission (JNNSM).
 
Emphasizing the importance of solar energy, Deepak Gupta, Secretary, Ministry of New and Renewable Energy, in his keynote address, highlighted the importance of mobilizing finance, need for technical knowledge and long term project planning.
 
Echoing Chaturvedi’s words, Gupta said that cost reduction through quantity deployment of technology, along with development of a domestic manufacturing base, and aggressive R&D efforts were necessary to achieve parity for solar energy.
 
In order to support JNNSM, MRNE has built up international linkages and established centers of excellence.
 
Gupta said that MRNE would work in close collaboration with the states to prevent any impediments to the implementation of JNNSM, adding that stakeholders would be answerable for their performance.
 
Gireesh B. Pradhan, Additional Secretary, MNRE, in his introductory remarks, pointed out on the uniqueness of the JNNSM, which is the first joint initiative of Ministry of Power and MNRE. Pradhan stressed on the need to take into consideration interest of the industry, investors and other stakeholders, adding that the pool of experienced and technical professionals needs to be developed in order to achieve the country’s need.
 
Emphasizing on the importance of solar energy in India, Gauri Singh, Joint Secretary, MNRE, in her welcome address, spoke on the necessity of JNNSM to put India on the Global Solar Energy map.
 
In conclusion, Dr. Sarita Nagpal, Deputy Director General, CII, remarked that solar energy was necessary in creating a low carbon Indian economy. She stressed on the importance of developing an eco-system with enabling regulatory and policy measures to facilitate in building a green economy.
 
 
Source: OneIndia News.
 
 

Centre to Give Away Rs. 5000 Crore to States for Forest Conservation: Jairam Ramesh

Bhopal – The Central Government will grant Rs. 5000 crore over the next five years to States towards better forest conservation, Union Minister of Environment & Forests, Mr. Jairam Ramesh, said on Friday.
 
Speaking at the convocation of the Indian Institute of Forest Management (IIFM), Mr. Jairam Ramesh said that the 13th Finance Commission, for the first time, has made a provision for a forest conservation grant worth Rs. 5000 crore to States with rich forest cover.
 
At Rs. 727 crore, Arunachal Pradesh will receive the largest share from this grant. Madhya Pradesh, Chhattisgarh and Maharashtra will follow with Rs. 490, Rs. 411 and Rs. 310 crore respectively.
 
The formula for the allocation of the grant has been designed to take into consideration three factors. The share of the total forest area in the country falling in any particular State is the first, further enhanced for those States where forested area is greater than the national average.
 
Interestingly, according to the 13th Finance Commission document, the enhancement serves to add a further compensation for the economic disability posed by forest cover. The entitlement of each State, so obtained, has been further weighted by the third factor, which is the quality of the forest in each State, as measured by density. The weights are progressively higher for areas under moderately dense and dense forest cover.
 
Talking about forest conservation and tiger protection, Mr. Ramesh said that the Centre and the States have spent Rs. 8,200 crore in forest areas in the last financial year, i.e., 2008-09. On the question of trans-location of lions from Gir Wildlife Sanctuary in Gujarat to the Kuno Palpur Sanctuary in Madhya Pradesh, he expressed inability of the Central Government to make a difference.
 
“I have asked Mr. Shivraj Singh Chauhan to convince Mr. Narendra Modi as they both belong to the same party, but that’s all that I can do,” Mr. Ramesh told The Hindu.
 
He also said that research was being conducted by the Wildlife Institute of India (WII) to re-introduce the Cheetah in India, with Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Gujarat as potential States where the re-introduction might take place.
 
He dismissed reports of the Ministry of Surface Transport calling the Ministry of Environment & Forests as a blockade in the construction of national highways, saying the MoEF had a 98% approval rate for highway projects. He, however, also said that “whenever and wherever national highways will pass through sensitive areas like tiger habitats or dense forests, we will raise concerns”.
 
Taking a dig at forest officers, he said that forest officers kept telling him that the best way to save forests was to drive away the people and the cattle out.
 
“A senior IFS officer from Madhya Pradesh told me that the Forest Rights Act has spelled the doom for forests but I told him that this is India, we have to save forests with the people and the cattle,” he said delivering the convocation address.
 
 
Source: The Hindu.
 
 

Carbon Emissions lead to Dangerous Changes in Oceans

Sydney – The rise in carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions is driving fundamental and dangerous changes in the chemistry and ecosystems of the world’s oceans, warn international marine scientists.
 
More than 30% of the CO2 released from burning fossil fuels, cement production, deforestation and other human activities goes straight into the oceans, turning them gradually more acidic. 
 
“Ocean conditions are already more extreme than those experienced by marine organisms and ecosystems for millions of years,” the researchers said. “This emphasises the urgent need to adopt policies that drastically reduce CO2 emissions.” 
 
Ocean acidification, which the researchers call the “evil twin of global warming”, is caused when the CO2 emitted by human activity, mainly burning fossil fuels, dissolves into the oceans. It is happening independently of, but in combination with, global warming. 
 
“Evidence gathered by scientists around the world… suggests that ocean acidification could represent an equal – or perhaps even greater threat – to the biology of our planet than global warming,” says study co-author, Ove Hoegh-Guldberg
 
“The resulting acidification will impact many forms of sea life, especially organisms whose shells or skeletons are made from calcium carbonate, like corals and shellfish,” adds Hoegh-Guldberg, professor at the Australian Research Council (ARC) Centre of Excellence for Coral Reef Studies
 
“These changes are taking place at rates as much as 100 times faster than they ever have over the last tens of millions of years,” Hoegh-Guldberg says. 
 
The scientists say there is now persuasive evidence that mass extinctions in past earth history, like the “Great Dying” of 251 million years ago and another wipe-out 55 million years ago, were accompanied by ocean acidification, which may have delivered the death-blow to many species. 
 
“These past periods can serve as great lessons of what we can expect in the future, if we continue to push the acidity of the ocean even further,” said lead author, Carles Pelejero, from the Marine Science Institute of CSIC in Barcelona, Spain, according to a release of the ARC Centre. 
 
“This will create conditions not seen on Earth for at least 40 million years,” he said. 
 
These findings were published in the latest issue of Trends in Ecology & Evolution.
 
 
Source: TOI, India.
 
 

Coca-Cola Partners with TechnoServe & The Gates Foundation to Boost Incomes of Farmers in E. Africa

Kampala, UgandaThe Coca-Cola Company, non-profit TechnoServe, and the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation launch a partnership to enable over 50,000 small fruit farmers in Uganda and Kenya to increase their productivity and double their incomes by 2014.
 
This four-year, $11.5 million partnership will enable mango and passion fruit farmers in East Africa to participate in the Company’s supply chain for the first time. With a $7.5 million grant provided by the Gates Foundation to TechnoServe, $3 million provided by The Coca-Cola Company, and $1 million by bottling partner Coca-Cola Sabco, the project aims to create new market opportunities for local farmers whose fruit will be used for Coca-Cola’s locally-produced and sold fruit juices. As the implementing partner, TechnoServe will train participating farmers in improving quality, increasing production, getting organized into farmer groups, and will facilitate access to credit.
 
“This partnership is a great example of sustainability. By partnering with tens of thousands of local farmers, we can help increase their incomes while meeting our needs for locally sourced fruit, benefiting both the community and our business,” says Nathan Kalumbu, Coca Cola’s East & Central Africa business unit president.
 
As global and local demand for fruit juice grows, there is a critical need to increase production. Small farmers can benefit from this increased demand by supplying fruit that meets the needs of local buyers such as Coca-Cola. Through this partnership, farmers who were previously unable to access this market opportunity will be provided with the tools to do so. This partnership will also serve as a model for Coca-Cola as it grows its juice business in other markets and has been designed to be easily replicated.
 
“This partnership is the type of innovative approach needed to foster economic empowerment across the globe and we are proud to be a part of this effort in East Africa,” says Muhtar Kent, Chairman and CEO of The Coca-Cola Company. “We and our partners, the Gates Foundation and Technoserve, believe that investing in farmers is a proven strategy to reduce poverty and build sustainable communities.”
 
“Empowering small farmers to increase productivity, improve crop quality and access reliable markets is critical to addressing global hunger and poverty,” says Sylvia Mathews Burwell, President of the Global Development Program of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. The foundation has committed more than $1.4 billion, focused on Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, to strengthen the entire agricultural value chain – from seeds and soil to farm management and market access – so that progress against hunger and poverty is sustainable over the long term. “Partnerships like this provide farmers with the tools and resources that can help revitalize African agriculture and increase opportunities for small farmers so they build better lives for themselves and their families.”
 
TechnoServe’s implementation of this partnership will build on a track record of similar partnerships underway across Africa including banana, cashews, cocoa and coffee. They will ensure that sustainable environmental and social standards are embedded into the program at the farm level.
 
“We are honored to be a part of this innovative collaboration, as it represents a significant step forward for private sector development in Africa,” says TechnoServe President and CEO, Bruce McNamer. “This investment will drive momentum toward reducing poverty across Africa by helping entrepreneurial farmers connect to markets and get the support they need.”
 
This project will be implemented in close collaboration with the governments of Kenya and Uganda, given its significance in the context of their poverty reduction strategies. It is intended to produce lasting benefits for participating farm communities, enabling them to benefit from improved livelihoods for many years to come.
 
 
Source: The Coca-Cola Company.
 
 

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