Showing posts with label preservation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label preservation. Show all posts

Video - Climate Change Valentines for Politicians in Australia



AYCC volunteers in Canberra, Australia, surprised politicians with a valentines Day message: "It's not the thought that counts, it's real action." As explained by these activists, Romance and politics have one things in common: "Actions speak louder than words."

Related Articles
UK Valentines Day Cards Against Fossil Fuels
A Love Letter to the Earth and its Inhabitants on Valentines Day

UK Valentines Day Cards Against Fossil Fuels

In the UK, Valentines Day 2014 is being marked by a national day of action. Valentines Day events are part of People and Planet's Go Green Week which is taking place from February 10-16, 2014. Students and staff from colleges and universities all across the UK are taking part.

On Valentines Day, Friday February 14th there is a national day of action in the UK that includes Fossil Free rallies across the country. These Valentines Day events also include cards for University Vice Chancellors (VCs) and politicians.

During Go Green Week, students in the UK are shining a spotlight on educational institution’s links to the fossil fuel industry. They engaged in a number of events including mass rallies and colourful, creative stunts on campuses. The Valentines Day message calls on universities to go Fossil Free.

Cards for Vice Chancellors

Throughout the week students have been collecting special valentine’s messages for Vice Chancellors (VCs) at universities across the UK. They are being delivered on Valentines Day. The Valentines Day message being sent to VCs is "It’s not me, it’s you!." The goal is to encourage VCs to "break up with the fossil fuel industry and show some love for our future."

They explain that a sustainable future on this planet isn’t compatible with continuing to burn fossil fuels. They lament the fact that the fossil fuel industry’s business plan seeks to extract 5 times more petrochemicals than we can afford if we are to avoid a climate crisis.

They specifically seek to encourage UK universities to divest from fossil fuels. They point out that in the UK universities still invest over £5bn annually in these climate-wrecking companies.

Click here to see an image of Oxford students delivering a giant Valentines card petition to their Vice Chancellor (VC).

Cards for Politicians 

On Valentines Day Go Green week is also sending a message to politicians, "It’s me, or the fossil fuels."

The ask the rhetorical question, "How can we expect political parties to face up to the reality of climate change whilst accepting funding from those who profit from destroying the climate?"

They point out that one third of current UK government ministers have links to dirty money from coal, oil and gas companies and from those bankrolling the industry. They go on to say that, "Politicians need to know that we are not prepared to let dirty fossil fuel donations delay effective action on climate change. So, it’s time that we demand our elected representatives break up with the fossil fuel industry."

Click here to send a Valentine’s Card to your MP telling them to refuse donations from the fossil fuel industry. 

Click here for a list of events that are taking place across the country. 

© 2014, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Articles
Video - Climate Change Valentines for Politicians in Australia
A Love Letter to the Earth and its Inhabitants on Valentines Day

A Love Letter to the Earth and its Inhabitants on Valentines Day

Valentines day is an opportunity to express love to people we care about, shouldn't the day also be about finding ways of communicating our love for the planet. No matter where we are, regardless of our power or wealth, we are all dependent on the Earth for our sustenance. Here is a love letter expressing gratitude for nature, and all those who work to make a better world.

We have many reasons to be grateful this Valentines Day. We are crafting positive environmental narratives that are getting more people on-board. A movement is being born that is infused with what can only be described as "eco-morality".  A new religious psychology and ethics is emerging that reinforces the environmental message. The new breed of environmentally concerned citizens gives us reason to hope that we will be able to tackle the difficult issues we face.

We are making progress on some of the most serious environmental issues of our time. In 2013 we saw progress on a number of fronts and over the course of the last few decades we have witnessed some impressive environmental success stories.

Much of this progress is attributable to people who work tirelessly on behalf of the planet and its inhabitants. We should be grateful to those who advocate for the Earth, this includes the work of the NRDC, WWF and Environmental Defense Canada, as well as a number of other organizations and individuals.

These efforts reveal that there is a powerful relationship between environmental gratitude and ecological advocacy. A heartfelt and well deserved thank you goes out to all who work to help protect our climate.

We also give thanks for the indigenous people of the Earth as they have so much to teach us about environmental stewardship. We are increasingly understanding that indigenous ecology is essential to environmental education.

Holidays give us an opportunity to reflect on the ways that we can be better environmental stewards. This is in evidence at Christmas, Thanksgiving, and Easter. It is important to know that however difficult it may seem, we can live in harmony with the planet.

Nature is so abundantly beautiful, that the only appropriate response is gratitude. This gratitude for nature is infused into the work of documentary filmaker Louie Schwartzberg.

The Arctic is important to us all and as such it is being increasingly appreciated as a crucial part of planetary health,  A number of people including Richard Branson, have championed Arctic conservation and protection efforts. There are so many reasons to love the Arctic, not the least of which is its spectacular beauty.

We are seeing more cooperation in water management and a host of solutions to the world water crisis including solutions to diminishing ground water

We are coming to terms with the complex yet vital role that forests play in the health of the planet including a number of economic and employment benefits. The business community is also beginning to appreciate that there is much they can do to protect our forests.

In the broadest sense, the business community is coming to terms with the business case for conserving nature. A growing body of research corroborates the value of environmental sustainability and a growing number of businesses are embracing sustainability in their strategic orientation. Across the board leading  businesses are engaging more ethical approaches to commerce. We are also seeing progress in a number of other areas including a growing green building movement.

We have reason to be grateful for the brave pioneers who have championed sustainability long before it was fashionable. This includes men like Ray Anderson, who made the business case for sustainability many years ago and companies like Patagonia that have been showing us the way for a long time now.

While we have achieved much, there is still much more that needs to be done. We need to make environmentalism everyone's concern. We all have a role to play advancing environmental action, and studies show that people will act when encouraged by people they like and respect. In essence we all need to realize that we are all fundamentally connected to the Earth and all its inhabitants.

© 2014, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Articles
UK Valentines Day Cards Against Fossil Fuels
Video - Climate Change Valentines for Politicians in Australia

World Wetlands Day 2014 Highlights Agriculture

Yesterday, Sunday February 2nd was World Wetlands Day (WWD). As 2014 is the UN International Year of Family Farming, the theme for this year is 'Wetlands and Agriculture.' The slogal for the Day is 'Wetlands and Agriculture: Partners for Growth,' placing a focus on the need for the wetland, water and agricultural sectors to work together for the best shared outcomes.

Our wetlands are of great importance to the health of the planet and all its inhabitants. Our waters provide habitat for a myriad of species, recharge groundwater and provide opportunities for wildlife viewing and other outdoor recreation.

As is becoming increasingly obvious climate change is drastically altering the water cycle. We are now living with more intense storms, floods, droughts, in addition to rising sea-levels. Many species are suffering from the impacts of habitat loss and we continue to make ever-increasing demands on our waters. Now more than ever we need to protect and restore these precious resources and the beneficial functions they offer.

WWD marks the date of the adoption of the Convention on Wetlands on 2 February 1971, in the Iranian city of Ramsar on the shores of the Caspian Sea. Each year since 1997, the Ramsar Secretariat has provided materials so that government agencies, non-governmental organizations, conservation organizations, and groups of citizens can help raise public awareness about the importance and value of wetlands.

The Ramsar Convention Secretariat

The Ramsar Convention Secretariat's reports of WWD activities of all types, from lectures and seminars, nature walks, children’s art contests, sampan races, and community clean-up days, to radio and television interviews and letters to newspapers, to the launch of new wetland policies, new Ramsar sites, and new programmes at the national level. Government agencies and private citizens from all over the world have sent us their news, often with photographs, and these annual summaries and over 1000 individual reports, with more than 1400 images, make an excellent archive of ideas for future celebrations.

And each year, the Ramsar Secretariat, with generous financial assistance from the private sector Danone Group, has offered a new selection of posters, stickers, videos, pocket calendars, leaflets and information packs free of charge and has suggested a unifying theme for the benefit of those who wish to use it.

The Danone-Evian Fund for Water generously supports World Wetlands Day as part of a collaborative partnership since 1998 between the Ramsar Convention and the Danone Group.

Click here to see local, national and international adaptations of WWD materials, the collection of all the WWD cartoons, the collection of WWD Children's activities.

The National Wildlife Federation (NWF)

In addition to the work of the Ramsar Convention a number of organizations work to protect wetlands, one of the best is the National Wildlife Federation (NWF). Their effort include:

Wetlands - Those amazingly productive and diverse waters that stand between upland and open water. As important as they are to water quality, flood storage, and biodiversity, they are vanishing at such a quick rate in some parts of the country that within our lifetime they may just be a memory. Economists estimate that one acre of wetlands provides about $10,000 worth of ecosystem services which include: filtering and recharging drinking water, preventing flooding, protecting our coasts from hurricanes and storms, and providing habitat for diverse wildlife populations.

Streams - Where water often first surfaces from underground and begins its march to the sea. They form a complex hydrologic network that absorbs and then gradually releases nutrients, organic matter, and stream flow downstream. These headwaters support a staggering diversity of fish and wildlife species. Like wetlands, they provide essential "services" for humans such as preserving water quality and lessening the impacts of flooding.

Floodplains- The flood-prone bottomlands that cradle rivers, streams, and wetlands are nature's best defense against floods and provide invaluable functions for wildlife and communities. Undisturbed floodplains — or those that have been restored to a near natural state — provide such benefits as flood and erosion control, groundwater recharge, enhanced farmlands, fish and wildlife habitat, and recreational opportunities. Development along floodplains puts people and property in harm's way, resulting in more frequent and severe floods, puts species at risk, and compromises water supplies.

To protect these valuable waters, NWF:

Works to restore Clean Water Act protections lost due to two controversial Supreme Court decisions. We advocate for legislation and agency action to restore Clean Water Act protections.

Advocates for preventing wetland and stream destruction and pollution through strong enforcement of the Clean Water Act. Since passage in 1972, the Clean Water Act has made great strides in protecting and restoring America's waters. A series of court cases and agency decisions threaten to reverse the unprecedented progress that was made over the previous 30 years. NWF litigates, advocates, and works with federal, state and local agencies to keep safeguards strong and protect our waters from development and population pressures.

Urges agencies to consider global warming and wildlife impacts when making decisions affecting our nation's waters. Decisions that affect our nation's waters must take into account the impacts of global warming on fish and wildlife — especially endangered species — and the aquatic habitat they depend on. NWF litigates, advocates, and collaborates with all levels of government to protect our wetlands, streams, and floodplains.

Keeps people and wildlife out of harm's way by promoting nonstructural solutions to flood control. Flooding poses a major threat to people and wildlife. National Wildlife Federation works at the local and national level to prevent development along floodplains. NWF has actively advocated for reforming the National Flood Insurance Program so that flood insurance rates reflect real risk.

Prevents the construction of water projects that will degrade, destroy, or alter waters' natural and beneficial functions and promotes economically and environmentally sound solutions. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' water civil works projects and outdated federal water policies can have devastating impacts on the nation's rivers, wetlands, and coasts. National Wildlife Federation coordinates the Water Protection Network to help hundreds of organizations and community leaders understand and influence Corps projects and federal water policy to ensure water projects and policies are economically and environmentally sound. NWF is also leading a campaign to prevent the Corps from constructing the New Madrid Levee Project.

Works to enact new national water planning guidelines that are more friendly to wildlife, that preserve intact ecosystems to feed our economic growth and buffer our communities from increasing threats from global warming. The 21st century, with the increasing pressures on our nation's water resources, demands a more proactive approach to water planning, rather than the piecemeal, project-by-project approach taken thus far.

© 2014, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Articles
Video - Celebration of World Wetlands Day with NCC: Canada's Freshwater
Video on the Hopeful Elements in the Global Environmental Outlook (GEO-5)
The Costs of Offshore Drilling
The Effects of Global Warming
Student Climate & Conservation Corps
A Cure for Green Blindness
UN World Water Day 2012
World Oceans Day 2012
World Oceans Day in America

Video - Overfishing: Current Levels of Fishing are Unsustainable and Jeopardize the Future of this Important Food Source



Around 90 million tons of fish are removed from the world's oceans every year. But the seemingly inexhaustible food source is proving finite. More and more fish species are disappearing. And it's no wonder, because up to ninety percent of each catch is thrown over board again as worthless by-catch. This documentary accompanies scientists, fishermen and fish processing factories. It reveals the sometimes threatening and sometimes unexpected links in overfishing and addresses real solutions to rescue the oceans.

Related Articles
GEO 5 Report on Water, Marine Pollution and Fish Stocks
Overfishing and Sustainable Seafood
The Fifth Global Environmental Outlook Report
World Fisheries Day
Seven Ways to Save the Seas
World Oceans Day in America
Protect the US Clean Water Act
Report on the UN's World Water Day Panel
Fisheries for Sustainable Fishers: Caribbean

Neatherlands Seeks Release of the Arctic 30 Through ITLOS

On Wednesday, November 6, the Netherlands brought a case before the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS) seeking the release of the Greenpeace ship Arctic Sunrise and its Crew. In her petition for the release of the Arctic 30, Dutch representative Liesbeth Lijnzaadsaid said Russia had "violated the human rights" of the activists after detaining them for seven weeks "without grounds."

The Arctic 30 have been detained in Russia since September 18, when the ship was boarded in international waters and the entire crew seized after a peaceful protest against Arctic oil drilling.

Russia did not attend the tribunal and said it does not recognize the case. Russia claims the activists posed a security threat. After initially charging the 30 with piracy, the charge was reduced to hooliganism which carries a jail sentence of up to 7 years.

Last week, Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev reiterated the assertion that the Greenpeace protest action posed a threat to the Russian workers on board, as well as the ship.

Rene Lefeber, another Dutch government representative, told the Hamburg court that the seizure was illegal. He stated that while the area where the Greenpeace crew was arrested is considered an exclusive economic zone and gives nations the right to protect their natural resources, they do not have the right to board the ship, seize the vessel or detain the crew.

Tribunal president judge Shunji Yanai set Nov. 22 as the provisional date for a court decision. Under the United Nations Convention of the Law of the Sea, maritime disputes and decisions are binding in the Hamburg court. However, there is no way of enforcing the court's rulings.

If you have not already done so please click here to sign and share the Greenpeace petition calling for the release of the Arctic 30.

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Articles
Greenpeace Crew Arrested in the Arctic by Russian Agents
Video - Show Your Support for the Arctic 30 on October 5: Defending the North is Not a Crime
Russia Drops Piracy Charges Against Arctic Protestors
Video - The Arctic is Under Threat from Shell and Gazprom
Video - Greenpeace Confronting Russia's Arctic Oil Exploration
The Race to Exploit the Arctic's Resources Ignores the Costs
Why the Fate of the Arctic Should be of Concern to Us All
The Arctic's Dangerous Combination of Environmental Toxicity and Genetic Vulnerability
Russia Lining Up Investors for Arctic Drilling
Global Warming Exposes Resources but Arctic Meeting Leaves Some Out in the Cold
Video - The Global Implications of Rapid Climate Change in the Arctic

30 Days of Climate Action on Tumblr

Breaking News: Russia Drops Piracy Charges Against Greenpeace Activists

Russian federal investigators have dropped piracy charges against the people involved in the Greenpeace protest over Arctic oil drilling. However, the 30 people will face the lesser charge of hooliganism. Under Russian law the piracy charge comes with a 12 year prison sentence while hooliganism has a seven year maximum sentence.

The charges arise from a peaceful protest against a Gazprom oil platform in the Pechora Sea on September 19. 

Russian Greenpeace spokesman Vladimir Chuprov said in a statement, "we will contest the trumped-up charge of hooliganism as strongly as we contested the piracy allegations....They are both fantasy charges that bear no relation to reality."

Despite Greenpeace's 42 year peaceful history, the Russian Investigative Committee have threatened the activists with the absurd charge of violence against authorities. Such a charge is punishable by up to 10 years in jail.

People all around the world have been calling on Russia to release the so called Arctic 30. Last week, 11 Nobel Peace Prize laureates, including South African anti-apartheid campaigner Desmond Tutu, published an open letter in which they made a similar request.

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved. far north, protection, preservation, help, assistance, fragile, harm, destruction, environment, climate change, global warming, ecosystem,

Related Articles
Neatherlands Seeks Release of the Arctic 30 Through ITLOS
Greenpeace Crew Arrested in the Arctic by Russian Agents
Video - Show Your Support for the Arctic 30 on October 5: Defending the North is Not a Crime
Video - The Arctic is Under Threat from Shell and Gazprom
Video - Greenpeace Confronting Russia's Arctic Oil Exploration
The Race to Exploit the Arctic's Resources Ignores the Costs
Why the Fate of the Arctic Should be of Concern to Us All
The Arctic's Dangerous Combination of Environmental Toxicity and Genetic Vulnerability
Russia Lining Up Investors for Arctic Drilling
Global Warming Exposes Resources but Arctic Meeting Leaves Some Out in the Cold
Video - The Global Implications of Rapid Climate Change in the Arctic

Greenpeace Crew Arrested in the Arctic by Russian Agents

Balaclava clad, machine gun toting, Russian FSB agents, rappelled down ropes from helicopters to detain 30 peaceful Greenpeace activists after their ship, the icebreaker Arctic Sunrise was boarded on September 19. In addition to arresting the ship's crew, the agents did substantial damage to communications equipment. The ship has been impounded and crew members have been incarcerated and are being denied access to legal or consular assistance.

The Arctic Sunrise was in the Arctic to protest Russian fossil fuel company Gazprom, which Greenpeace has called, "one of the most reckless oil companies in the world today.”

The Arctic Sunrise was boarded as it circling Gazprom’s Prirazlomnaya platform at the three nautical mile limit which is inside of Russia’s Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ). According to Greenpeace this is an illegal boarding. As stated in the United Nations Convention on the Law of the Sea foreign vessels are guaranteed the right to navigate in the EEZ of another state without interference of any kind.

Officials on Gazprom’s Prirazlomnaya oil platform countered saying that the Greenpeace vessel was carrying a bomb. The truth is that Arctic Sunrise is towing a safety pod.

Earlier, two other Greenpeace activists were arrested and held without charge after they scaled Gazprom’s drilling platform on Wednesday in a peaceful protest.

Click here to find out how you can help to free the detained activists.

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Articles
Video - Greenpeace Confronting Russia's Arctic Oil Exploration

The Greenpeace "I Love the ARCTIC" Campaign
Video - I Love Arctic (Greenpeace)

Video - Greenpeace Confronting Russia's Arctic Oil Exploration



Greenpeace ship seeking to expose Arctic drilling is confronted by Russian military while in international waters. Who wins in the struggle to protect the Arctic: state-backed Russian oil giants? Or common sense?

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Articles
Greenpeace Crew Arrested in the Arctic by Russian Agents
The Greenpeace I Love the ARCTIC Campaign
Video - I Love Arctic (Greenpeace)

NASA Imagery Shows Trees are Dying in US Forests

Years of drought and high temperatures are thinning forests in the upper Great Lakes and the eastern United States. According to 2013 NASA satellite imagery which is part of the third National Climate Assessment, nearly 40 percent of Mid-Atlantic forests have lost tree canopy cover. Other afflicted areas include southern Appalachia, the southeastern coast and to a lesser extent, the Rocky Mountains and the Sierra Nevada.

The combination of less water and higher temperatures are making trees, especially southern pines and the upper Midwest's hardwoods, more vulnerable to insects and new pathogens.

Climate change is impacting forests in several ways including increasing the risk of forest death through wildfires, insect infestations, drought, and disease outbreaks,

As part of a destructive feedback loop, tree losses will further exacerbate climate change. Trees absorb heat-trapping carbon dioxide emissions and thus can reduce the effects of climate change. According to the EPA in 2010, trees absorbed 13% of US emissions.

The NASA study is based on monthly satellite images which provides a more detailed picture of changes in forests, wetlands and grasslands over extended periods of time. The news from these images is not all bad, they also reveal that in the western parts of Alaska, higher temperatures have helped forests by expanding the growing season for trees.

© 2013, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Articles
International Forest Day 2013
Infographic - Forests and Land Use
2012 Review of Forests and Trees
The Economic and Employment Benefits of Forests
Study Shows Deforestation of Tropical Rainforest Decreases Precipitation
Study Shows that Climate Change is Killing Forests
Using Trees for Electricity is Not Green Energy
What The Business Community Can Do To Protect Forests
The Costs of Illegal Logging
The Lacey Act Combats Illegal Logging

The State of Our Oceans: We are Headed Towards a Marine Mass Extinction

Oceans are the defining feature of our planet and they are indispensable to life. People are also intimately connected to oceans whether we live inland or on the coast. The world/s oceans are an essential part of life on Earth, they generate most of the oxygen we breathe, they provide valuable sources of food and they regulate our climate.

One of the greatest threats to oceans comes from acidification. According to 2012 research from the University of Bristol, ocean acidification is occurring at unprecedented rates. This is mainly due to the absorption of carbon dioxide emitted by humans.

Acidification is killing coral which provides the habitat for one quarter of all marine species. There are 7 billion people to feed on the planet today and another 2 billion are expected by 2050.

The oceans are under threat. We have fished out 90 percent of the ocean's big fish. Government subsidies in the fishing industry amount to about $27 billion a year and have created excess capacity and depleted fish stocks globally.

Humans are also responsible for a wide assortment of pollutants from oil spill to plastic waste and we have created coastal dead zones from agriculture.

The knowledge that humans are destroying the marine environment is not new. A 2011 report  released by an international panel of interdisciplinary marine scientists on behalf of the International Programme on the State of the Oceans (IPSO) clearly makes the point that we are headed towards a marine mass extinction on a scale unprecedented in human history.

The IPSO study is corroborated by many other studies which demonstrate that the ocean is under severe threat, including disappearing coral reefs, rapidly increasing acidification, and growing incidences of marine life extinctions.

A 2011 report indicates that
  • Human actions have resulted in warming and acidification of the ocean and are now causing increased hypoxia (low oxygen) Studies of the Earth’s past indicate these three symptoms (warming, acidification, hypoxia) indicate “disturbances of the carbon cycle” associated with all five previous mass extinctions on Earth. The rate of carbon absorption by the ocean is already far greater than what it was at the time of the last globally significant marine mass extinction when up to half of some marine deep-sea species where wiped out.
  • The speeds of many negative changes to the ocean are near to or are tracking the worst-case scenarios from the IPCC and other predictions. Some are as predicted, but many are faster than anticipated, and many are still accelerating.
  • The magnitude of the cumulative impacts on the ocean is greater than previously understood.
  • Timelines for action are shrinking. The longer we take to get serious about reducing carbon emissions, the more it will cost and the harder it will be to effectively make meaningful reductions. In the meantime, environmental damage will accrue causing greater socioeconomic impacts. The problem isn’t going away.
  • Resilience of the ocean to climate change impacts is severely compromised by the other stressors from human activities, including fisheries, pollution, and habitat destruction.
  • Ecosystem collapse is occurring as a result of both current and emerging stressors Among those stressors are chemical pollutants, overfishing, agricultural runoff, and sediment loads.
  • The extinction threat to marine species is rapidly increasing.
As stated by the David Suzuki Foundation,

"What this study also shows is that we cannot look at ecosystems, species, and environmental problems in isolation. This research points out that the combined impacts of all the stressors are far more severe than what scientists might conclude by looking at individual problems...Further delay in resolving these serious problems will only increase costs and lead to even greater losses of the natural benefits oceans give to us. "

The IPSO report urges that we change the ways that we relate to the ocean, it further advocates the adoption of a “holistic approach to sustainable management of all activities that impinge marine ecosystems....This has to be part of a wider re-evaluation of the core values of human society and its relationship to the natural world and the resources on which we all rely.”

Related Articles
GE is Helping Nestle to Save Millions of Gallons of Water
The Ocean Conservancy's International Coastal Cleanup Day
New Great Lakes Water Quality Agreement
World Oceans Day 2012
World Oceans Day in America (2012)
Urgent Appeal to Save our Oceans
Marshall Islands World Ocean Day 2012
State of the Climate Global Analysis Nov 2011
Seven Ways to Save the Seas
Air and Water in the OECD Report
OECD Environmental Outlook to 2050: The Consequences of Inaction
Water as a Weapon of WarNew Tool Helps Companies with Water Risks
Protect the US Clean Water Act
Report on the UN's World Water Day Panel Discussion
World Oceans Day UN Panel Discussion
Alarming Facts About Water
Solutions to Diminishing Ground Water
Population Growth and Climate Change will Add to the World Water Crisis
Water Management Webcast: Cities and the Global Water Crisis
Siemens Water Tool on Facebook
Water School’s Ascent of Mount Kilimanjaro
Banana Peels and Water Purification
Sustainable Water Purification Technology Investing in Water
Celebrate World Water Day
UN World Water Day 2012
World Water Week 2011
World Water Week 2011: The Business of Water Management Requires Collaboration
World Oceans Day 2011 is Focused on Youth
WWF Celebrates Canada Water Week
GWC and World Water Day 2011
First International Water Hour
Blog Action Day 2010: Raising Awareness about Water

GEO 5 Report on Water, Marine Pollution and Fish Stocks


The fifth edition of the Global Environmental Outlook (GEO-5) was published on June 6, 2012. This United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) report indicates there are major issues related to water, marine pollution and fish stocks

Water

Of the 30 environmental goals examined in relation to water, only one goal – that of increasing access to clean drinking water – shows significant progress. But less progress has been made in rural areas, especially in Africa and the Pacific. Despite some improvements, water quality remains the largest cause of human health problems worldwide. At the same time, climate change and further population growth are likely to result in even greater water shortages in many regions.

Water quality in at least parts of most major river systems still fails to meet World Health Organization (WHO) standards. More than 600 million people are expected to lack access to safe drinking water by 2015, while more than 2.5 billion people will lack access to basic sanitation. As water scarcity increases, some regions will be forced to rely more on energy- intensive desalination technologies. By 2030, an estimated US $9-11 billion will be spent annually on additional infrastructure to provide sufficient quantities of water, especially in developing countries.

Curbing water pollution could result in health benefits of more than US $100 million in large OECD economies alone. Nitrate concentrations are projected to increase due to water pollution from fertilizers and inadequate sanitation, resulting in serious threats to human health and aquatic life.

Although freshwater pollution seems to be on the increase, proper monitoring has declined in many regions.
Further deterioration of groundwater supplies has been recorded since 2000, while global water withdrawals have tripled over the past 50 years. Agriculture accounts for 92 per cent of the global water footprint and many global agricultural centres are particularly dependent on groundwater, including northwest India, northeast Pakistan, northeast China and western United States.

Integrated water management and monitoring tools need to be developed and strengthened if the world is to better manage current and future water challenges. At present, about 158 of the 263 international freshwater basins still lack cooperative management frameworks. Other obstacles to better water management include: Insufficient data, the absence of comprehensive monitoring systems and water security indicators to track trends over time.

Marine Pollution

Little or no progress has been achieved in preventing, reducing or controlling pollution of the marine environment. The number of coastal dead zones has increased dramatically in recent years. Out of the 169 coastal dead zones worldwide, only 13 are recovering and 415 coastal areas suffer from eutrophication. Around 80 per cent of marine pollution is caused by land-based activities. Of 12 seas surveyed between 2005 and 2007, the South-East Pacific, North Pacific, East Asian Sea and Caribbean contained the most marine litter. Ratification of the MARPOL convention by 150 countries is resulting in reduced pollution from ships despite gaps in implementation. Governance of marine areas beyond boundaries is weak and fragmented.

Marine protected areas have proven in many cases to be effective conservation tools, with recent surveys showing higher fish populations inside reserves than in surrounding areas and in the same areas before reserves were established.

Fish Stocks

The last two decades witnessed unprecedented deterioration in fish stocks. Though catches more than quadrupled from the early 1950s to the mid-1990s, they have stabilized or diminished since then - despite increased fishing. In 2000, catches could have been 7-36 per cent higher were it not for stock depletion. This translated into economic losses to the value of US $4-36 billion. Commercial fisheries and overfishing are the main threat to stocks. Fish products certified by the Marine Stewardship Council constituted only 7 per cent of global fisheries in 2007.

To access the full report click here.

Related Posts
Overview of the Fifth Global Environmental Outlook Report (GEO-5)
Overfishing and Sustainable Seafood
The Fifth Global Environmental Outlook Report
World Fisheries Day
Seven Ways to Save the Seas
World Oceans Day in America
Protect the US Clean Water Act
Report on the UN's World Water Day Panel
Fisheries for Sustainable Fishers: Caribbean
The Costs of Offshore Drilling
Whats the Fracking Problem?

Overfishing and Sustainable Seafood

June 8th is World Oceans Day, the UN-designated day for the global community to celebrate and take action for our shared ocean. Whether you’re on a coastal city or far  inland, the water around you ends up in the ocean downstream. The ocean is the great connector—no matter what country you’re from, we’re all citizens of the ocean. The world is eating more seafood than ever, and we’re pushing the ocean and its fish to the limit. According to the United Nations, approximately two-thirds of ocean species are overfished, and some types of commercial fishing catch up to seven times more unwanted fish than targeted species.

Savor the seafood

Limit fish consumption to a few special meals a month and choose species that are abundant and fished or farmed with minimal harm to the surrounding environment. We can eat well and do good at the same time.

Make ocean-friendly choices

Remember to eat locally caught species when possible. For those in the US, check out the Monterey Bay Aquarium’s Seafood Watch Guide or download the Seafood Watch app to find some sustainable seafood recommendations. You can also check out the international WWF’s seafood guides for global recommendations.

Choose your fish wisely

Eating fish is generally healthy but many fish species are contaminated with mercury and other pollutants. Children and pregnant women, in particular, should be extra careful when choosing seafood. Check KidSafeSeafood and be safe!

Buy from ethical companies; ask your local grocers and chefs to do the same

Vote with your wallet by supporting companies that show a real commitment to protecting the environment. Fish2Fork has a guide to ethical restaurants in several countries, and visit FishChoice.com to link up sustainable buyers and sellers.

Make your voice heard!

Tell your political representatives that over fishing is an issue you can about, want them to act on, and you will vote on. Sign petitions, weigh in with opportunities for public comment, and email or write your representatives. You can also check out some organized movements addressing over fishing such as WWF’s More Fish campaign and Hugh’s Fish Fight!  Take action online and in your community to raise awareness!

Cut down on your meat consumption

As much a third of the annual global catch is ‘forage fish’ which become fish meal—much of which is then used to raise cows, chickens and pigs in factory farms, as well as some aquacultured species, like farmed salmon. By cutting down on your meat consumption, you will reduce demand for these forage fish which are a vital component of the complex oceanic food web.

Screen a fish film

Film is a great way to spread the word about the over fishing problem. Consider showing a documentary
such as The End of the Line at home, in your school, community center, or place of worship.

In honor of World Oceans Day, take action this June 8th and pledge to consume only sustainable seafood throughout the year.

© 2012, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Posts
GEO 5 Report on Water, Marine Pollution and Fish Stocks
The Fifth Global Environmental Outlook Report
World Fisheries Day
Seven Ways to Save the Seas
World Oceans Day in America
Protect the US Clean Water Act
Report on the UN's World Water Day Panel
Fisheries for Sustainable Fishers: Caribbean
The Costs of Offshore Drilling
Whats the Fracking Problem?

Scientists Defend the Lacey Act

A prominent group of scientists have published a report that claims the Lacey Act legislation curbs deforestation and enhances the competitiveness of US logging and wood processing industries. The new report urges Congress to leave the law alone and provide enough money to enforce it.

The report was released on April 16, by the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS), it is titled “Logging and the Law: How the U.S. Lacey Act Helps Reduce Illegal Logging in the Tropics. ” The report outlines how illegal logging poses a significant threat to the US economy and endangers tropical ecosystems around the world.

Changes to the Lacey Act could cost the US wood industry millions as well as lead to job losses. The report states that removing penalties for companies that illegally import foreign wood would hurt domestic loggers and processors. That’s why a number of large companies and groups oppose illegal wood products.

“Congress can sustain the U.S. wood industry, reduce destructive logging practices, and help Americans make sustainable consumer choices by supporting and funding implementation of the Lacey Act,” the report says.

“Lawmakers must preserve the Lacey Act because it closes the entire U.S. timber market to illegally sourced wood – an approach to stopping illegal logging that’s supported by economic research,” said Pipa Elias, UCS consultant and author of the report. “The law ensures that the U.S. wood industry isn’t undercut by cheap, illegally harvested wood.”

“You really need to affect the incentives for illegal logging in order to reduce it, and the incentive is that people are going to buy that product,” Elias said. “So anything that would ultimately ... continue to allow people to buy an illegal product wouldn’t really create that market change that the research has shown can be effective.”

Putting an end to illegal logging is widely supported by industry groups. Organizations like the American Forest and Paper Association, the National Wood Flooring Association, Home Depot and Lowe’s all support policies to stop illegal logging. Companies can now turn to wood certification to ensure the wood they are sourcing is sustainable.

“The Lacey Act should remain in place as is,” said Elias. “It protects the U.S. wood industry, the U.S. economy, as well as tropical forests.”

In addition to harming U.S. businesses, the report shows that illegal logging causes significant damage to tropical forests by reducing biodiversity, destroying soil, damaging trees and releasing carbon dioxide that contributes to global climate change. Every year illegal logging contributes to tropical forest loss, which in total is roughly the size of Pennsylvania.

To download "How the U.S. Lacey Act Helps Reduce Illegal Logging in the Tropics," click here.

© 2012, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Posts
The Economic and Employment Benefits of Forests
What The Business Community Can Do To Protect Forests
The Costs of Illegal Logging
The Lacey Act Combats Illegal Logging
Challenge to the Lacey Act
Video: Reducing Emissions Through Forest Preservation with REDD

Challenge to the Lacey Act

Efforts are underway to erode the Lacey Act which protects Americans from wood that is illegally harvested. In March, two Republicans, Paul Broun, R-Ga., and Sen. Rand Paul, R-Ky., introduced legislation to repeal the requirement that US companies comply with foreign environmental laws. Their bill would lower the penalties for violations under the Lacey Act. A bill introduced last fall by Democratic Rep. Jim Cooper of Nashville and Republican Rep. Marsha Blackburn of Brentwood would eliminate penalties for people who procure illegal woods.

The Broun/Paul bill will allow illegally traded wood — which is cheap and often taken from over-forested or protected land — to make its way into the US market.

The Blackburn/Cooper legislation could allow businesses to avoid penalties by claiming they didn’t know they were violating a foreign law. Wood certification makes it very easy for companies to ensure that imported wood is legal and sustainable.

Changing the Lacey Act does not make sense because reducing penalties for companies that illegally import foreign wood ultimately hurts the domestic wood industry which in turn hurts the economy.

Many large organizations support approaches like those contained in the Lacey Act. Companies like Staples and the American Forest and Paper Association support policies that reduce the threat that illegal wood products pose to the US market.

If the industry supports the Lacey act then why can't lawmakers?

© 2012, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Posts
The Economic and Employment Benefits of Forests
What The Business Community Can Do To Protect Forests
The Costs of Illegal Logging
The Lacey Act Combats Illegal Logging
Scientists Defend the Lacey Act
Video: Reducing Emissions Through Forest Preservation with REDD

The Lacey Act Combats Illegal Logging

The Lacey Act protects forests making it one of the most important pieces of environmental legislation in US law books. An amendment to the Lacey Act is the first-ever law prohibiting the trade of products made with illegally logged wood. The Lacey Act was first passed in 1900 to ban the transport of poached game across state lines. It was amended in 2008 to bar importing wood that is illegally exported under another country’s laws.

The May 2008, Congressional amendments to the Lacey Act prohibit commerce in plant and plant products that were taken in violation of state, tribal or foreign law. The amendments also require importers to declare the species and country of origin of plants or plant products imported into the US, including information for wood materials used in products.

In essence, the Lacey Act closes the American timber market to illegally harvested wood. In addition to obvious environmental benefits, it makes good economic sense to stop illegal logging. The law effectively prevents cheap wood from undercutting prices in the industry.

Most illegal hardwood comes from tropical forests for use in furniture, cabinets and home décor. The Lacey Act blocks the importation of raw material and products made from illegal wood, eliminating the US market for these products.

In addition to protecting US businesses, the Lacey Act also protects forests.

Given the benefits it provides to the US wood industry, the US economy, and tropical forests, the Lacey Act is a vital part of American environmental law.

© 2012, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Posts
The Economic and Employment Benefits of Forests
What The Business Community Can Do To Protect Forests
The Costs of Illegal Logging
Challenge to the Lacey Act
Scientists Defend the Lacey Act
Video: Reducing Emissions Through Forest Preservation with REDD

The Costs of Illegal Logging

Illegal loggers undermine the competitive advantage of legal producers by selling unlawfully cut or stolen wood at artificially low prices. This practice creates trade distortions that decrease the global price of legal wood by about 16 percent.

In a 2007 letter to Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR), the American Forest & Paper Association noted that illegal logging contributed to mill closures, job cuts and an estimated billion dollar in losses for the wood industry. The World Bank estimates that illegal logging costs governments and businesses at least $10 billion to $15 billion in losses each year.

Illegal logging imposes unacceptable costs including putting the wood industry in financial jeopardy, threatening jobs, and harming the wider economy.

Illegal logging also causes significant damage to tropical forests by reducing biodiversity, destroying soil, damaging trees and releasing carbon dioxide that contributes to global climate change. Every year illegal logging contributes to tropical forest loss, which in total is roughly the size of Pennsylvania. It is clear that forests are crucial to the health of the planet.

Illegal logging represents a major threat to the environment and the US economy. Which is why the Lacey Act, the US legislation that protects against illegal logging, must be upheld.

© 2012, Richard Matthews. All rights reserved.

Related Posts
The Economic and Employment Benefits of Forests
What The Business Community Can Do To Protect Forests
The Lacey Act Combats Illegal Logging
Challenge to the Lacey Act
Scientists Defend the Lacey Act
Video: Reducing Emissions Through Forest Preservation with REDD