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Supreme Court seeks details of Yamuna Action Plan

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 31 Oktober 2012 | 22.33

IANS Oct 30, 2012, 03.38PM IST

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Tuesday asked the central government to place before it the Yamuna River Action Plan with details to prevent the untreated effluents flowing into it.

The apex court bench headed by Justice Swatanter Kumar also wanted to know how Rs 12,000 crore, spent by all the stakeholders for cleaning the river, was used.

The court also directed that the minutes of the Yamuna River Development Authority (YRDA) be placed before it.

The court said that what has been given to it was only a part and not the minutes of the entire proceedings of the YRDA.

Justice Swatanter Kumar asked the Delhi Jal Board (DJB) and the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) to set up a two-member committee to check the efficacy of the 18 sewage treatment plants operational in Delhi at present.

The court direction came in the wake of the DJB confirming to it that the treated effluents from 18 sewage treatment plants (STP) were flowing into the Yamuna.

However, it admitted that because of capacity constraints of the STP, some of the untreated effluents too were going into the river.

The court allowed CPCB counsel Vijay Panjwani's plea to allow inspection of the electricity bills of the 18 STPs.

He contended that because of their over or underdesign, the STPs were operating at their optimal capacity.


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Scientists look at climate change, the superstorm

WASHINGTON: Climate scientist Michael Oppenheimer stood along the Hudson River and watched his research come to life as Hurricane Sandy blew through New York.

Just eight months earlier, the Princeton University professor reported that what used to be once-in-a-century devastating floods in New York City would soon happen every three to 20 years. He blamed global warming for pushing up sea levels and changing hurricane patterns.

New York "is now highly vulnerable to extreme hurricane-surge flooding," he wrote.

For more than a dozen years, Oppenheimer and other climate scientists have been warning about the risk for big storms and serious flooding in New York. A 2000 federal report about global warming's effect on the United States warned specifically of that possibility.

Still, they say it's unfair to blame climate change for Sandy and the destruction it left behind. They cautioned that they cannot yet conclusively link a single storm to global warming, and any connection is not as clear and simple as environmental activists might contend.

"The ingredients of this storm seem a little bit cooked by climate change, but the overall storm is difficult to attribute to global warming," Canada's University of Victoria climate scientist Andrew Weaver said.

Some individual parts of Sandy and its wrath seem to be influenced by climate change, several climate scientists said.

First, there's sea level rise. Water levels around New York are a nearly a foot (0.3 meters) higher than they were 100 years ago, said Penn State University climate scientist Michael Mann.

Add to that the temperature of the Atlantic Ocean, which is about 2 degrees Fahrenheit (.8 degrees Celsius) warmer on average than a century ago, said Katharine Hayhoe, a climate scientist at Texas Tech University. Warm water fuels hurricanes.

And Sandy zipped north along a warmer-than-normal Gulf Stream that travels from the Caribbean to Ireland, said Jeff Masters, meteorology director for the private service Weather Underground.

Meteorologists are also noticing more hurricanes late in the season and even after the season. A 2008 study said the Atlantic hurricane season seems to be starting earlier and lasting longer but found no explicit link to global warming. Normally there are 11 named Atlantic storms. The past two years have seen 19 and 18 named storms. This year, with one month to go, there are 19.

After years of disagreement, climate scientists and hurricane experts have concluded that as the climate warms, there will be fewer total hurricanes. But those storms that do develop will be stronger and wetter.

Sandy took an unprecedented sharp left turn into New Jersey. Usually storms keep heading north and turn east harmlessly out to sea. But a strong ridge of high pressure centered over Greenland blocked Sandy from going north or east, according to the National Hurricane Center.

Jennifer Francis of Rutgers University, an expert in how a warming Arctic affects extreme weather patterns, said recent warming in the Arctic may have played a role in enlarging or prolonging that high pressure area. But she cautioned it's not clear whether the warming really had that influence on Sandy.

While components of Sandy seem connected to global warming, "mostly it's natural, I'd say it's 80, 90 percent natural," said Gerald North, a climate professor at Texas A&M University. "These things do happen, like the drought. It's a natural thing."

On Tuesday, both New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Gov. Andrew Cuomo said they couldn't help but notice that extreme events like Sandy are causing them more and more trouble.

"What is clear is that the storms that we've experienced in the last year or so, around this country and around the world, are much more severe than before," Bloomberg said. "Whether that's global warming or what, I don't know. But we'll have to address those issues."

Cuomo called the changes "a new reality."

"Anyone who says that there's not a dramatic change in weather patterns I think is denying reality," Cuomo said. "I told the president the other day: `We have a 100-year flood every two years now."'

For his published research, Oppenheimer looked at New York City's record flood of 1821. Sandy flooded even higher. This week's damage was augmented by the past century's sea level rise, which was higher than the world average because of unusual coastal geography and ocean currents. Oppenheimer walked from his Manhattan home to the river Monday evening to watch the storm.

"We sort of knew it could happen, but you know that's different from actually standing there and watching it happen," Oppenheimer said from a cell phone. "You don't really imagine what this looks like until you see it."


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New species of lizard discovered in Australia

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 30 Oktober 2012 | 22.33

Researchers from The Australian National University found the six centimetre long Ctenotus ora, or the Coastal Plains Skink, living in the dunes along the Swan Coastal Plain between Dunsborough and Mandurah, south of Perth.

MELBOURNE: A new species of lizard has been discovered hidden among the sand dunes outside Perth, but there is little cause for celebration as scientists warn the creature is on the verge of extinction.

Researchers from The Australian National University found the six centimetre long Ctenotus ora, or the Coastal Plains Skink, living in the dunes along the Swan Coastal Plain between Dunsborough and Mandurah, south of Perth.

Mankind's encounter with this new species may be short-lived as urban sprawl and habitat destruction are already pushing the tiny creature towards extinction, researchers warned.

The discovery detailed in the journal Zootaxa, took place during research to determine the levels of biological diversity in South-western Australia by ecologists Geoffrey Kay from the Fenner School of Environment & Society, and Professor Scott Keogh from the ANU Research School of Biology.

"The discovery of a new species is a momentous occasion in science. To find something as yet undetected, so close to one of the country's largest cities, demonstrates how much we've still got to discover," Kay said in a statement.

"Although it's a fantastic discovery, it's poor cause for celebration. Our new lizard is under serious risk of being erased just as suddenly as it appeared to us," Kay added.

"Only a few of these lizards have ever been found in the wild, so while we know numbers are low, we are not sure of the exact size of the remaining population," Kay said.

The small stretch of sand the skink calls home is steadily being converted into residential developments to accommodate growth in Perth and the surrounding regions.

"Developments along the coastline near Perth need to consider this new lizard and potentially a large number of other species yet to be discovered in this diverse part of the world," said Kay.

South-western Australia is recognised as one of the top 25 biodiversity hotspots in the world, alongside places such as Madagascar, the tropical jungles of West Africa, and Brazil's Cerrado.

"We've known for a long time that the southwest has an outstanding diversity of plants, as exhibited by its stunning wildflowers. But only now with this research are we seeing that the level of diversity in animals, in particular reptiles, is far deeper and more extreme than we previously imagined," Kay said.

"In some cases, by using new genetic techniques and technology, we're finding what we thought was only one species is in fact 9 or 10 very different ones," Kay added.


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Supreme Court seeks details of Yamuna Action Plan

NEW DELHI: The Supreme Court on Tuesday asked the central government to place before it the Yamuna River Action Plan with details to prevent the untreated effluents flowing into it.

The apex court bench headed by Justice Swatanter Kumar also wanted to know how Rs 12,000 crore, spent by all the stakeholders for cleaning the river, was used.

The court also directed that the minutes of the Yamuna River Development Authority (YRDA) be placed before it.

The court said that what has been given to it was only a part and not the minutes of the entire proceedings of the YRDA.

Justice Swatanter Kumar asked the Delhi Jal Board (DJB) and the Central Pollution Control Board (CPCB) to set up a two-member committee to check the efficacy of the 18 sewage treatment plants operational in Delhi at present.

The court direction came in the wake of the DJB confirming to it that the treated effluents from 18 sewage treatment plants (STP) were flowing into the Yamuna.

However, it admitted that because of capacity constraints of the STP, some of the untreated effluents too were going into the river.

The court allowed CPCB counsel Vijay Panjwani's plea to allow inspection of the electricity bills of the 18 STPs.

He contended that because of their over or underdesign, the STPs were operating at their optimal capacity.


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Flamingo flock makes pit stop in Chennai

Written By Unknown on Senin, 29 Oktober 2012 | 22.33

CHENNAI: These are special guests in times of destruction and degradation. The arrival of a flock of flamingos in Chennai has excited birdwatchers, photographers and environmentalists. Around seven Greater Flamingos, including six adolescent birds, were spotted at the Pallikaranai marsh on Sunday morning. Ornithologists said the birds are probably on their way from Rann of Kutch in Gujurat to Kodiakkarai (Point Calimere) in Nagapattinam. Rann of Kutch, close to the Pakistan border, is one of the largest flamingo breeding grounds.

"During winter, they travel south to feed. Chennai, however, is not a feeding ground so they are probably making a stopover here," said K V Sudhakar, president of Madras Naturalist Society. Flamingos are more common at Pulicat Lake, around 60km north of Chennai.

"It is very unlikely that they will stay here for more than a few days," said Sudhakar. The next time one will have a chance to spot them in the city is in March, when they start their return journey back to their breeding grounds.

But birdwatchers in the city say spotting these elegant birds has become rare over the past decade. "We spotted around 40 the year before last. There have been very few sightings and it is a privilege to see them," Sudhakar said.

Flamingos were sighted in the Adyar estuary till two decades ago. "But now they do not come to the mouth of the river any more because of encroachments in the area," said T Murugavel, a city-based environmentalist. "One or two birds still stop there sometimes during migration and also in the backwaters in Sholinganallur."

There are five species of flamingos in the world. Two of them are found in India, the Greater and Lesser Flamingo. These birds can grow up to 145cm in height and have a wingspan of up to 165cm. They are known for a distinctive pink hue and their peculiar way of feeding. "The pink hue comes from aqueous bacteria and beta carotene in their diet," said Sudhakar.

They have long necks and they are their beaks sieve the algae, plankton, shrimp and small fish they eat," said Sudhakar.

There are about two lakh flamingos left in the country.


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14 tigers in Manas national park

THIMPHU: Over 200 cameras that were switched on 24X7 for 64 days have confirmed the presence of 14 tigers in the Manas national park that Bhutan shares with India, a media report said.

Wildlife officials of Bhutan's Royal Manas National Park and Manas National Park in India have confirmed the presence of 14 Royal Bengal tigers across the trans-boundary area. Six out of them were tigresses, reported kuenselonline.com

Royal Manas manager Tenzin Wangchuk said 204 camera-traps were fixed in the core tiger habitat areas.

He said that cameras mounted on trees and poles were on 24X7 for 64 days; to avoid damage from elephants, fresh elephant dung was placed on the camouflaged cameras.

Of the 14 tigers, four were common, photographed both in Bhutan and India, Tenzin Wangchuk was quoted as saying.

"This joint study was possible only through financial, technical and field support from World Wildlife Fund and Bhutan Foundation."

The Royal Manas National Park spread over 1,057 sq km is located in the southern foothills. It borders India?s Manas tiger reserve in the south forming a transboundary conservation landscape.

In both national parks, conservationists said there was a combined record of 60 species of mammals such as Bengal tiger and clouded leopard. There are also 500 species of birds and more than 1,000 plant species.


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Turning waste into power

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 28 Oktober 2012 | 22.33

Saswati Mukherjee, TNN Oct 27, 2012, 05.52AM IST

(KS Sivaprasad holds the…)

BANGALORE: Just when Bangalore is staring at a sea of garbage piling on its streets, one Bangalorean has shown how waste can be effectively converted into fuel. And he has done it in Malaysia, which has successfully adapted his technology.

KS Sivaprasad holds the patent for developing the Refuse Derived Fuel (RDF) Power System — a technology that converts mixed garbage to fuel to finally produce power. Today, he is director (technical advisor) of Core Competencies, a Malaysian firm which provides electricity to 2 lakh people there. The plant daily converts 700 tonnes of garbage to 8.9MW of power.

Sivaprasad, a resident of Madiwala, has just one regret — despite the huge success rate in other parts of the globe, no one in India and Bangalore in particular has approached him to utilize this technology

"This is green power. We obtain this after removing all the pollutants, including heavy metals, from the mixed garbage. All we require is a plot of land to station this plant," Sivaprasad said.

THE GENESIS

It all started in the 1970s when US was looking to generate alternative fuel from municipal waste in the wake of the oil crisis. "That's when the idea struck me and I developed this technology in India," said Sivaprasad, who set up a plant in Madiwala then. The biggest global recognition for RDF came in 1995 when he participated in a UN conference in Bangkok.

He made a presentation and got a call from the Malaysian company which wanted to introduce this technology there. In 2006, they started work on building the plant and by 2009, the plant started power generation. He is working on a second plant which will treat up to 1,000 tonnes of garbage.

How power is generated

Segregation is done in several steps at the plant Non-combustible matter is segregated and moisture content reduced by drying it Recyclable matter (like plastic) and hard material like bricks or stone are removed next Kitchen waste sent for composting Combustible matter that remains is fuel taken to boiler to generate steam Steam is fed to the turbine to generate power Pollution abatement system incorporated in boiler, which produces clean energy From 1,000 tonnes of garbage, about 400 tonnes of green fuel is finally obtained.


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Arctic thaw will release 850 billion tonnes carbon, says latest study

Subodh Varma, TNN Oct 27, 2012, 05.26PM IST

(This is the first time an…)

NEW DELHI: Global warming just spun more out of control than thought. As much as 44 billion tons of nitrogen and 850 billion tons of carbon stored in the frozen wastes of Arctic could be released into the environment as the region begins to thaw over the next century, a new study led by the US Geological Survey said. The thawing process has already started with sea-ice levels at their lowest this summer.

What is staggering is the the new numbers put out by the USGS. If these are correct, it would mean that carbon quantity in the atmosphere will roughly double. It will greatly enhance the rate at which warming is already taking place and could cause widespread destruction of life and habitat.

This is the first time an estimate of the nitrogen trapped in the Arctic permafrost has been released. Scientists had till now been using computer model based climate predictions. The carbon estimate is consistent with previous modeling estimates and gives more credence to other scientific studies with similar carbon estimates.

"This study quantifies the impact on Earth's two most important chemical cycles, carbon and nitrogen, from thawing of permafrost under future climate warming scenarios," said USGS Director Marcia McNutt in a media release. "While the permafrost of the polar latitudes may seem distant and disconnected from the daily activities of most of us, its potential to alter the planet's habitability when destabilized is very real.""

To generate the estimates, scientists studied how permafrost-affected soils, known as Gelisols, thaw under various climate scenarios, the USGS said. They found that all Gelisols are not alike: some Gelisols have soil materials that are very peaty, with lots of decaying organic matter that burns easily these will impart newly thawed nitrogen into the ecosystem and atmosphere. Other Gelisols have materials that are very nutrient rich these will impart a lot of nitrogen into the ecosystem. All Gelisols will contribute carbon dioxide and likely some methane into the atmosphere as a result of decomposition once the permafrost thaws and these gases will contribute to warming. What was frozen for thousands of years will enter our ecosystems and atmosphere as a new contributor.

"The scientific community researching this phenomena has made these international data available for the upcoming Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. As permafrost receives more attention, we are sharing our data and our insights to guide those models as they portray how the land, atmosphere, and ocean interact," said study lead Jennifer Harden, USGS Research Soil Scientist.


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Turning waste into power

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 27 Oktober 2012 | 22.33

KS Sivaprasad holds the patent for developing the Refuse Derived Fuel Power System — a technology that converts mixed garbage to fuel to finally produce power.

BANGALORE: Just when Bangalore is staring at a sea of garbage piling on its streets, one Bangalorean has shown how waste can be effectively converted into fuel. And he has done it in Malaysia, which has successfully adapted his technology.

KS Sivaprasad holds the patent for developing the Refuse Derived Fuel (RDF) Power System — a technology that converts mixed garbage to fuel to finally produce power. Today, he is director (technical advisor) of Core Competencies, a Malaysian firm which provides electricity to 2 lakh people there. The plant daily converts 700 tonnes of garbage to 8.9MW of power.

Sivaprasad, a resident of Madiwala, has just one regret — despite the huge success rate in other parts of the globe, no one in India and Bangalore in particular has approached him to utilize this technology

"This is green power. We obtain this after removing all the pollutants, including heavy metals, from the mixed garbage. All we require is a plot of land to station this plant," Sivaprasad said.

THE GENESIS

It all started in the 1970s when US was looking to generate alternative fuel from municipal waste in the wake of the oil crisis. "That's when the idea struck me and I developed this technology in India," said Sivaprasad, who set up a plant in Madiwala then. The biggest global recognition for RDF came in 1995 when he participated in a UN conference in Bangkok.

He made a presentation and got a call from the Malaysian company which wanted to introduce this technology there. In 2006, they started work on building the plant and by 2009, the plant started power generation. He is working on a second plant which will treat up to 1,000 tonnes of garbage.

How power is generated

Segregation is done in several steps at the plant Non-combustible matter is segregated and moisture content reduced by drying it Recyclable matter (like plastic) and hard material like bricks or stone are removed next Kitchen waste sent for composting Combustible matter that remains is fuel taken to boiler to generate steam Steam is fed to the turbine to generate power Pollution abatement system incorporated in boiler, which produces clean energy From 1,000 tonnes of garbage, about 400 tonnes of green fuel is finally obtained.


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Arctic thaw will release 850 billion tonnes carbon, says latest study

This is the first time an estimate of the nitrogen trapped in the Arctic permafrost has been released. Scientists had till now been using computer model based climate predictions.

NEW DELHI: Global warming just spun more out of control than thought. As much as 44 billion tons of nitrogen and 850 billion tons of carbon stored in the frozen wastes of Arctic could be released into the environment as the region begins to thaw over the next century, a new study led by the US Geological Survey said. The thawing process has already started with sea-ice levels at their lowest this summer.

What is staggering is the the new numbers put out by the USGS. If these are correct, it would mean that carbon quantity in the atmosphere will roughly double. It will greatly enhance the rate at which warming is already taking place and could cause widespread destruction of life and habitat.

This is the first time an estimate of the nitrogen trapped in the Arctic permafrost has been released. Scientists had till now been using computer model based climate predictions. The carbon estimate is consistent with previous modeling estimates and gives more credence to other scientific studies with similar carbon estimates.

"This study quantifies the impact on Earth's two most important chemical cycles, carbon and nitrogen, from thawing of permafrost under future climate warming scenarios," said USGS Director Marcia McNutt in a media release. "While the permafrost of the polar latitudes may seem distant and disconnected from the daily activities of most of us, its potential to alter the planet's habitability when destabilized is very real.""

To generate the estimates, scientists studied how permafrost-affected soils, known as Gelisols, thaw under various climate scenarios, the USGS said. They found that all Gelisols are not alike: some Gelisols have soil materials that are very peaty, with lots of decaying organic matter that burns easily these will impart newly thawed nitrogen into the ecosystem and atmosphere. Other Gelisols have materials that are very nutrient rich these will impart a lot of nitrogen into the ecosystem. All Gelisols will contribute carbon dioxide and likely some methane into the atmosphere as a result of decomposition once the permafrost thaws and these gases will contribute to warming. What was frozen for thousands of years will enter our ecosystems and atmosphere as a new contributor.

"The scientific community researching this phenomena has made these international data available for the upcoming Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change. As permafrost receives more attention, we are sharing our data and our insights to guide those models as they portray how the land, atmosphere, and ocean interact," said study lead Jennifer Harden, USGS Research Soil Scientist.


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Making Bellary green again to cost 30 thousand crore

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 26 Oktober 2012 | 22.33

NEW DELHI: Rehabilitation of the illegal iron ore mining-ravaged environment in Bellary, Chitradurga and Tumkur districts of Karnataka will need Rs 30,000 crore over the next 30 years, the Supreme Court has been informed.

Submitting a report detailing the plan of action for rehabilitation of the environment, the central empowered committee (CEC) said, "The project period is planned to be 30 years and the current financial year (2012-13) has been taken as the preparatory year. "Financial year 2013-14 has been taken as the first year of the project and financial year 2043-44 would be the last year. The proposed cost is about Rs 30,000 crore.

The CEC report, submitted through amicus curiae and advocate A D N Rao, added, "During the first five years of the project, an amount of about Rs 9,347 crore is expected to be available for transfer to the special purpose vehicle (SPV). The SPV will be constituted under the chairmanship of the Karnataka chief secretary to implement the environment management plans.

"Even on a conservative basis, the total amount expected to be available exceeds the planned project cost of Rs 30,000 crore by about Rs 2,847 crore," said the CEC. Under the 'polluter pays' principle, it proposed recovering the entire amount from the lease-holders.

The CEC has submitted a lease-wise plan prepared by member-secretary M K Jiwrajika for reclamation and rehabilitation of areas found under illegal mining and also a supplementary environment management plan (SEMP).

On the funding for the plan, the CEC said it would come from 10% sale proceeds of existing stock of category 'A' mining leases (least illegal), 15% sale proceeds of stocks of category 'B' mine leases (rampant illegal mining), 10% sale proceeds of iron ore produced by 'A' & 'B' category mines after they resume production and compensation receivable from 'B' category mines.

Seeking SC's approval, the CEC said it would "provide for mitigating measures in the mining impact zone, ameliorative measures for socio-economic development, infrastructure development, forest and wildlife conservation, health, education and other measures to ensure inclusive growth of the project area and an effective evaluation mechanism".


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Shops for solar devices to be opened in Haryana

State owned Haryana Renewable Energy Development Agency (HAREDA) has decided to open 'Akshay Urja' shops in nine districts of the state for sale and repair of the solar and energy efficient devices.

CHANDIGARH: State owned Haryana Renewable Energy Development Agency (HAREDA) has decided to open 'Akshay Urja' shops in nine districts of the state for sale and repair of the solar and energy efficient devices.

The shops would be opened in Fatehabad, Rohtak, Sonipat, Bhiwani, Ambala, Yamunanagar, Palwal, Mewat and Jhajjar districts, a HAREDA spokesman said.

He said HAREDA had invited Expression of Interest (EoI) from NGOs or companies or unemployed youths for opening such shops.


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Wal-Mart, in China, pushes suppliers down green path

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 25 Oktober 2012 | 22.33

BEIJING: Wal-Mart Stores Inc has given global suppliers five years to comply with its environmental rules or risk being pushed off U.S. shelves at the world's largest retailer, expanding a sustainability campaign launched in 2009.

The new requirements, announced in China where Wal-Mart has more than 20,000 suppliers, will compel workshops that churn out much of the world's toys, clothing and electronics to improve on energy efficiency, waste reduction and other markers on the retailer's checklist.

Wal-Mart said the checklist was voluntary. But if suppliers fall short, they could be cut off from the nearly 4,000 Walmart discount stores and more than 600 Sam's Club wholesale warehouses that the company operates in the United States.

The standards set in Wal-Mart's "sustainability index", which has helped to burnish an image tarnished by criticism from labour groups and local communities, have already been embraced by 500 of the world's major consumer product makers.

The retailer said that by the end of 2017, US Walmart and Sam's Club stores will get 70 percent of their goods from global suppliers that use the sustainability index.

"This will send a clear message to the Walmart supply chain that if you want to grow and partner with us for the long term, you will engage with us on the sustainability index," Wal-Mart Chief Executive Mike Duke said in a speech in Beijing, a copy of which was provided to Reuters in advance.

TOY STORY

Wal-Mart comes in at No. 99 on Newsweek's annual environmental ranking of the world's 500 biggest publicly traded companies, trailing six other retailers but coming in just ahead of its closest competitor, France's Carrefour SA.

Wal-Mart has pushed suppliers to cut down on packaging, water usage and energy consumption, in part because it cuts costs.

It launched the sustainability index in July 2009, saying it would eventually be used in ratings that let consumers judge how green a product is.

The company is a frequent target of labour groups who say it pays poverty-level wages at its U.S. stores and drives small competitors out of business, but it has earned praise from environmental groups for its green efforts.

Environmental group Greenpeace, though, said Wal-Mart's "humongous supply chain is still far from clean" and urged the company to address more issues such as deforestation and the use of pesticides and chemical fertilizers in its fresh produce.

Its China ties have also drawn scrutiny. Wal-Mart was among the pioneers in buying from China after it joined the World Trade Organisation in 2001, which helped drive down prices in Wal-Mart's stores but added to the U.S. trade deficit and left the company open to complaints that it was hurting U.S. jobs.

Wal-Mart said as recently as 2008 that it directly exported about $9 billion a year out of China, and third-party suppliers shipped another $9 billion, although it no longer provides that information on its website.

A 2007 study by the U.S.-based think tank Economic Policy Institute estimated that the retailer alone accounted for 11 percent of the growth in the U.S.-China trade gap between 2001 and 2006.

Because of its size - Wal-Mart's global sales are nearly quadruple those of the world's No. 2 retailer, Carrefour - its environmental rules can have an outsized impact when filtered through its tens of thousands of suppliers.

Wal-Mart registered some $65 billion in second-quarter sales at its namesake U.S. stores, accounting for about 7 cents out of every retail dollar spent in the United States, excluding autos.

But it is also legendary for pressuring suppliers to cut prices, and that can make it hard for smaller firms to get greener. While reducing energy usage saves money, if it requires retrofitting then the initial investment may be large.

Wal-Mart said its index covers 107 product categories such as apparel, electronics and toys. It asked its buyers to use the index to choose suppliers and set conditions.

The company has been seeking ways that help to save energy or otherwise sustain its people and the environment but without raising prices for its cost-conscious customers.

A Wal-Mart executive told Reuters in September that the retailer had asked computer makers to shorten the default time before their laptops and PCs lapse into sleep mode, cutting it to five minutes from the standard 30 minutes.

Duke said the retailer's toy buyers visited Chinese factories recently "with the index in hand" to judge energy usage and check on whether the plastics used in the toys were safe for factory workers and their communities.

"The index is providing us with a full picture of the sustainability of products - from social to environmental issues, from the impact on workers to the impact on the planet," Duke said.


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Ozone hole over Antarctic second smallest in two decades

The ozone layer -- which helps protect the Earth from potentially dangerous ultraviolet rays that can cause skin cancer and cataracts -- began developing holes on an annual basis starting in the 1980s due to chlorofluorocarbons, or CFCs.

WASHINGTON: The seasonal hole in the ozone layer above the Antarctic this year was the second smallest in two decades, but still covered an area roughly the size of North America, US experts said.

The average size of the Earth's protective shield was 6.9 million square miles (17.9 million square kilometers), according to satellite measurements by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and US space agency NASA.

"It happened to be a bit warmer this year high in the atmosphere above Antarctica, and that meant we didn't see quite as much ozone depletion as we saw last year, when it was colder," said Jim Butler of NOAA's Earth System Research Laboratory in the Colorado city of Boulder.

The Antarctic ozone hole, which forms in September and October, reached its largest size for the season -- 8.2 million square miles, roughly the combined area of the United States, Mexico and Canada -- on September 22, NOAA said.

In comparison, the largest ozone hole recorded to date was one of 11.5 million square miles in the year 2000.

The ozone layer -- which helps protect the Earth from potentially dangerous ultraviolet rays that can cause skin cancer and cataracts -- began developing holes on an annual basis starting in the 1980s due to chlorofluorocarbons, or CFCs.

CFCs, once commonly used in refrigerators and aerosol cans, now are almost non-existent thanks to an international treaty signed on September 16, 1987, amid global concern over widening holes in the ozone layer.

Still, it could take another decade before scientists detect early signs that the ozone over the Antarctic is returning, NOAA said.

The ozone layer above Antarctica likely will not return to its early 1980s state until about 2060, according to NASA scientist Paul Newman.


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‘Nympho’ lioness turns the heat on males in Gujarat

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 24 Oktober 2012 | 22.33

Strange behaviour of a lioness has raised curiosity among wildlife activists and forest officials in Savarkundla, Amreli district of Gujarat.

RAJKOT: Strange behaviour of a lioness has raised curiosity among wildlife activists and forest officials in Savarkundla, Amreli district of Gujarat.

The lioness, believed to be 10 years old, is seen mating with lions much more frequently, a behaviour that is far from normal. Unlike normal lioness, who do not mate for 12 to 18 months after the mating season, this lioness is seen in the act every fortnight.

According to sources — who have seen this lioness in forest near Savarkundla of Amreli district — unlike other lioness, this lioness comes into the heat regularly. In fact, eyewitnesses say they see this lioness coming into the heat every fortnight.

"Locally this lioness is called 'Varol'. There are three lions and one lioness in the area. Few months ago we first spotted the lioness mating with a lion and after few days she was again seen mating with another lion. We continued to monitor her and we were surprised that she comes into the heat regularly. This is extremely unusual,'' a wildlife activist from Savarkundla said. Forest officials confirmed the behaviour of the lioness. "This lioness is nymphomaniac," a forest official, who worked in Gir for close to eight years, said.

Wildlife experts said those lionesses who are unable to conceive after the mating show such characteristics. "In such cases, the lioness comes into heat every 14 days. There may be fertility issue, but it is a rare a case. In 2003, one lioness with such behaviour was spotted in Tulsishyam forest range in Gir east division. However, this is not a disease or any problem,'' head, conservation biology and animal ecology at Dehradun-based Wildlife Institute of India, Dr Y V Zhala said told TOI.


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Punjab to set up solar power clusters for tubewells

The Punjab government supplies free power to farmers and the subsidy burden arising out of free power is expected to grow to Rs 5,700 crore this fiscal.

CHANDIGARH: The Punjab government has decided to explore the possibility of developing solar power clusters to energise agricultural pumps in rural areas, which can help the state to bring down the power subsidy cost, an official said.

Punjab Deputy chief minister Sukhbir Singh Badal on Wednesday said that "there is a large scope for developing solar power clusters in rural areas to provide power to agricultural pumps directly thereby cutting the subsidy and further investing the saved money to produce clean energy".

Badal asked the state non-renewable energy minister Bikram Singh Majithia to get a study including technical as well as financial viability of the proposed solar power clusters done.

"Under this proposed initiative, a cluster of tubwells will be identified and after identifying the power requirement of these tubwells, solar power panel with one time investment can be installed to supply power to agricultural pumps," state-owned Punjab Energy Development Agency (PEDA) Chief Executive Officer T P S Sidhu said.

The Punjab government supplies free power to farmers and the subsidy burden arising out of free power is expected to grow to Rs 5,700 crore this fiscal.

Majithia informed the deputy chief minister that PEDA was considering a proposal to create land pools in Kandi as well as Kalanaur area of Gurdaspur district to attract investment for setting up of big solar power plants.

Badal also asked PEDA to set a target to generate 500 MW of power, each in biomass as well as solar power sectors in next two years. He also asked PEDA to analyse reasons for slow implementation of setting up such power plants and directed to remove the bottlenecks.


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Buffer zone around sanctuaries will have adverse impact: Goa Mineral Ore Exporters' Association

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 23 Oktober 2012 | 22.33

PANAJI: Mine owners in Goa have expressed their reservations over the state government's decision to have buffer zones around wildlife sanctuaries.

Thirty-three mines, operating within one km of a national park, sanctuary or protected areas without permission, will be directly affected if the decision is implemented.

Goa Mineral Ore Exporters' Association (GMOEA) secretary Glenn Kalavampara said given the contiguity of forest land due to the topography of Goa, the Cabinet decision to demarcate eco-sensitive buffer zones of 100 m to one km around the wildlife sanctuaries and national parks here, will have an adverse socio-economic impact in these regions.

"GMOEA supports an eco-sensitive and sustainable view to mineral development in the state. However, this decision by the Cabinet takes 4.7 per cent of Goa out of the ambit of economic progress and directly impacts over 4,000 jobs in the area, without any rightful reason," he said.

The total forest area in Goa is about 38 per cent of the total geographical area, of which, less than 7 per cent area, where mining happens is considered to be forest area and these mines have been accorded all the requisite government clearances, both at the state and the central level, the GMOEA said.

Last Wednesday, the Goa Cabinet had decided to keep one km of buffer zone for wildlife sanctuaries and fixed 100 metres for Salim Ali bird sanctuary and Bondla wildlife sanctuary here.


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UN biodiversity conference outcome a huge achievement: India

PTI Oct 22, 2012, 06.25PM IST

(Representatives of 193…)

NEW DELHI: India on Monday claimed a "huge" achievement with nations agreeing to increase funding for halting rate of biodiversity loss, despite economic downturn, at a UN conference it hosted and said it would have bearing on climate change and other international negotiations.

Government said developed countries have agreed to double funding to support efforts in developing states towards meeting the internationally-agreed Biodiversity Targets, and the main goals of the Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011-2020.

"Outcome has shown that this Ministry and our negotiators ... have come out with tremendous vision, initiative and success as the President of the CoP and achieved a difficult target that we had set for ourself which is the pledge of doubling biodiversity funds from developed-developing countries especially in the backdrop of the economic downturn," environment minister Jayanthi Natarajan said.

"I think, it is a huge achievement. Because, It doesn't bear on biodiversity alone. It will have bearing on climate change, it will have bearing on other international negotiations," she told reporters here after conclusion of the 11th meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity at Hyderabad.

The Environment Ministry said in a release that all parties agreed to substantially increase domestic expenditures for biodiversity protection over the same period. These targets, and progress towards them, will be reviewed in 2014, it said.

For the first time, developing countries at COP 11, including India and several African states, pledged additional funds above and beyond their core funding towards the work of the CBD.

The conference also saw the launch of the Hyderabad Call for Biodiversity Champions. The programme will accept pledges from governments and organisations in support of the Strategic Plan for Biodiversity. The government of India this week committed over USD 50 million as part of the programme.


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UN biodiversity conference outcome a huge achievement: India

Written By Unknown on Senin, 22 Oktober 2012 | 22.33

Representatives of 193 countries decided that the developed countries would double the biodiversity-related international funds by 2015, using a baseline figure of the average annual national spending on biodiversity between 2006 and 2010.

NEW DELHI: India on Monday claimed a "huge" achievement with nations agreeing to increase funding for halting rate of biodiversity loss, despite economic downturn, at a UN conference it hosted and said it would have bearing on climate change and other international negotiations.

Government said developed countries have agreed to double funding to support efforts in developing states towards meeting the internationally-agreed Biodiversity Targets, and the main goals of the Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011-2020.

"Outcome has shown that this Ministry and our negotiators ... have come out with tremendous vision, initiative and success as the President of the CoP and achieved a difficult target that we had set for ourself which is the pledge of doubling biodiversity funds from developed-developing countries especially in the backdrop of the economic downturn," environment minister Jayanthi Natarajan said.

"I think, it is a huge achievement. Because, It doesn't bear on biodiversity alone. It will have bearing on climate change, it will have bearing on other international negotiations," she told reporters here after conclusion of the 11th meeting of the Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity at Hyderabad.

The Environment Ministry said in a release that all parties agreed to substantially increase domestic expenditures for biodiversity protection over the same period. These targets, and progress towards them, will be reviewed in 2014, it said.

For the first time, developing countries at COP 11, including India and several African states, pledged additional funds above and beyond their core funding towards the work of the CBD.

The conference also saw the launch of the Hyderabad Call for Biodiversity Champions. The programme will accept pledges from governments and organisations in support of the Strategic Plan for Biodiversity. The government of India this week committed over USD 50 million as part of the programme.


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A pair of jeans now to help save the environment

PTI Oct 21, 2012, 01.17PM IST

LONDON: Eureka! You could do your bit to save the environment by simply wearing a pair of jeans.

Researchers have come up with 'super cleaner' denims that work the same way as catalytic converters in cars.

The catalytic jeans were conceived by Professor Tony Ryan and fashion designer Helen Storey, who discovered that when denim is covered with tiny particles of a mineral called titanium dioxide, it reacts with air and light to break down harmful emissions in the air.

The pollutants - produced by traffic and factories - are then neutralised and simply washed away when the garment is laundered.

So in theory, jeans wearers of the future could help to clean the dirty air around them simply by walking about in their favourite pair.

With toxic emissions killing an estimated 1.3 million people a year worldwide, the resulting improvement in air quality could significantly reduce deaths and respiratory illnesses such as asthma.

Storey, of the London College of Fashion, renowned for dressing stars such as Madonna and Cher, "re-discovered science" after meeting Ryan, from Sheffield University.

The pair started working on a green science and fashion collaboration called Wonderland, which developed into Catalytic Clothing.

Their eureka moment came when they realised that microscopic particles of titanium oxide, which is contained in glass, paving stones and sun cream, worked as a pollution-buster when sprayed on clothes.

They found that the particles were able to grip on to the millions of fibres in the material and had a greater effect due to the constant movement of the fabric while being worn.

This is because titanium oxide needs light and airflow to catalyse and turn noxious gases into harmless, water-soluble nitrates.

"It seemed to be particularly effective on denim jeans and then we realised there were more denim jeans on the planet than people, the Independent quoted Storey as saying.

"So even if we could only get it to work on denim we could achieve quite a lot in terms of what the technology could do for the world," Storey said.


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NGO cites govt data to oppose setting up of National Investment Board

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 21 Oktober 2012 | 22.33

NEW DELHI: The Centre for Science and Environment (CSE) came out against the proposed National Investment Board (NIB), warning that green clearances were already too easy to get and seldom followed up with monitoring. The Delhi-based NGO presented government data showing environmental clearances for 2,17,794 mw of thermal power had been given during the 11th five year Plan as compared to only 53,000 mw that actually got commissioned during the period.

Stating that the NIB would destroy the existing environmental regulatory regime, which instead needed more reforms, CSE noted that project rejection rates for forest clearances were a mere 6% and that of environment clearance an almost negligible 0.1%.

Over the same 11th Plan, Chandra Bhushan, deputy director general of CSE, said, "In total 276 thermal power plants of 2.2 lakh megawatt (MW) capacity, 203 steel plants of 132 million tonnes per annum capacity and 112 cement plants with capacity to produce an additional 202 million tonnes cement every year, have been accorded environment clearance in the 11th five year Plan."

Saying that the government should instead dwell on the reasons behind delay in commissioning of cleared projects, Sunita Narain, director general of the NGO, asked, "The data shows that the Ministry of environment and forests has not been an impediment to infrastructure development. Instead, it has granted massive numbers of clearances. Why, therefore, do we need the NIB?"

Asking for reforms in the clearance processes, CSE demanded that a single-window system be evolved which would ensure each project could be tagged and tracked for all the all green clearances and monitored. The green think tank asked for giving powers and capacity to monitor to the state pollution control boards while doing away with their authority to give clearances under the Water (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act, 1974 and the Air (Prevention and Control of Pollution) Act was enacted in 1981.

The data released by CSE showed that 8,734 projects had been granted forest clearance and 1.98 lakh hectares of forest land diverted for development in the 11th Plan. The pace of forest land diversion had doubled during period. These clearances included 119 coal mining projects accorded forest clearance, diverting 31,500 hectares of forest land —the highest number cleared in any five year Plan since 1981.


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A pair of jeans now to help save the environment

LONDON: Eureka! You could do your bit to save the environment by simply wearing a pair of jeans.

Researchers have come up with 'super cleaner' denims that work the same way as catalytic converters in cars.

The catalytic jeans were conceived by Professor Tony Ryan and fashion designer Helen Storey, who discovered that when denim is covered with tiny particles of a mineral called titanium dioxide, it reacts with air and light to break down harmful emissions in the air.

The pollutants - produced by traffic and factories - are then neutralised and simply washed away when the garment is laundered.

So in theory, jeans wearers of the future could help to clean the dirty air around them simply by walking about in their favourite pair.

With toxic emissions killing an estimated 1.3 million people a year worldwide, the resulting improvement in air quality could significantly reduce deaths and respiratory illnesses such as asthma.

Storey, of the London College of Fashion, renowned for dressing stars such as Madonna and Cher, "re-discovered science" after meeting Ryan, from Sheffield University.

The pair started working on a green science and fashion collaboration called Wonderland, which developed into Catalytic Clothing.

Their eureka moment came when they realised that microscopic particles of titanium oxide, which is contained in glass, paving stones and sun cream, worked as a pollution-buster when sprayed on clothes.

They found that the particles were able to grip on to the millions of fibres in the material and had a greater effect due to the constant movement of the fabric while being worn.

This is because titanium oxide needs light and airflow to catalyse and turn noxious gases into harmless, water-soluble nitrates.

"It seemed to be particularly effective on denim jeans and then we realised there were more denim jeans on the planet than people, the Independent quoted Storey as saying.

"So even if we could only get it to work on denim we could achieve quite a lot in terms of what the technology could do for the world," Storey said.


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Safaris in Bandipur, Nagarahole national parks stopped

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 20 Oktober 2012 | 22.33

MYSORE: A day after the safari at Bandipur and Nagarahole national parks began, it has been suspended temporarily not because of Supreme Court direction but due to alleged interference.

This is a setback to the tourism industry which has already took a hit with the recent Cauvery protests. The tiger sanctuaries were closed for over two-and-half months until Thursday when the Supreme Court ordered its reopening. A source from the forest department confirmed that they had received an oral communication from their higher authorities against taking any bookings for Friday. "However, we didn't get any explanation for stopping the safari a day after it began," the source said.

Principal chief conservator of forests (Wildlife) Dipak Sarmah confirmed to TOI that the safari had been stopped pending government approval. Even he refused to clarify the reason for the suspension.


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Developed countries agree to double funds for biodiversity

Minister of environment and forests Jayanthi Natrajan(C), convention of biological diversity executive secretary Braulio Ferreira de Souza(L) and vice minister for the ministry of environment for the Republic of Korea Yoon Jong-Soo shake hands during the convention on biodiversity (CBD) in Hyderabad on October 19. (AFP Photo)

HYDERABAD: In a major breakthrough at the United Nations conference on biological diversity, which concluded here early Saturday, the developed countries agreed to double funding by 2015 to protect the planet's animal and plant species.

After marathon discussions which continued well past midnight, the 11th meeting of the Conference of the Parties (COP11) to the United Nations Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) reached an agreement to increase funding in support of actions to halt the rate of loss of biodiversity.

"Developed countries agreed to double funding to support efforts in developing states towards meeting the internationally-agreed Biodiversity Targets, and the main goals of the Strategic Plan for Biodiversity 2011-2020," said a release from the CBD secretariat.

Using a baseline figure of the average annual national spending on biodiversity between 2006 and 2010, developed countries said they would double biodiversity-related international financial flows by 2015.

According to sources, this means $12 billion would be available every year for biodiversity conservation as against the average $6 billion per annum earmarked between 2006 and 2010.

The observers say the summit succeeded in evolving a consensus despite the reluctance of developed countries to commit additional funding in view of the economic slowdown.

However, the task on hand is still huge with India-UK High Level Panel chaired by environmental economist Pavan Sukhdev, estimating that $150 billion to $440 billion per annum is required to meet the targets.

COP10 at Nagoya, Japan in 2010 had set 20 biodiversity targets known as Aichi targets and had also adopted a 10-year strategic plan to achieve those targets.

Over 190 countries are parties to CBD adopted at the 1992 Rio Earth Summit.

The working group on resource mobilisation met several times since Friday evening to iron out differences between the developing and developed countries.

The COP also set targets to increase the number of countries that have included biodiversity in their national development plans, and agreed to prepare national financial plans for biodiversity by 2015.

All Parties agreed to substantially increase domestic expenditures for biodiversity protection over the same period, said the statement. For the first time, developing countries at COP 11, including India and several African states, pledged additional funds above and beyond their core funding towards the work of the CBD.

Resource mobilisation to achieve biodiversity targets by 2020 and implement the strategic plan, was the most contentious issue at the two-week conference, attended by over 14,000 delegates from 193 countries.

The meet also decided to pay special attention to bio-diversity rich marine areas. The Saragasso Sea, the Tonga archipelago and key corals sites off the coast of Brazil are among a range of marine areas to receive special attention from governments.

Other key decisions include new measures to factor biodiversity into environmental impact assessments linked to infrastructure and other development projects in marine and coastal areas.

Earlier, the plenary chaired by India's Environment and Forest Minister Jayanthi Natrajan unanimously adopted the document on the financial mechanism.

India, as the chair of the summit, played a key role in ending the logjam over resource mobilisation by proposing a middle path.

Supported by G-77 and China, India called upon parties to reach an agreement and to avoid a collective failure to advance the cause of biodiversity conservation.


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Giant African land snail invading MP, threatens to consume plants and infect humans

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 19 Oktober 2012 | 22.33

INDORE: You might have seen some insects invading earth in numerous Hollywood movies, now its time to get real. A giant dangerous snail is gradually invading Madhya Pradesh, threatening to consume plants and plaster and infect humans along its way. The creature known as the Giant African Land Snail (GALS) has been listed as of one of the world's 100 most invasive species by International Union for Conservation of Nature and Natural resources (IUCN).

According to researchers the slow moving sloth not only can consume at least 500 different types of plants but can cause structural damages to plaster and stucco and can carry a parasitic nematode that can lead to meningitis (brain fever) in human. It was first reported at Varahmihir Forest Nursery located at Malhar Ashram campus, Indore around two years back since then its presence has been reported in Dhamod and Bhopal. Number of GALS is increasing rapidly and it is feared to spread in different parts of states.

Chief Conservator of Forest (Research & Extension) Pankaj Shrivastav, who is carrying out research on GALS, said that invasion of GALS is no more a remote threat for Madhya Pradesh. They are reportedly breeding very rapidly and eating plants and garbage voraciously and the extent of infestation was serious enough to brand it as a 'biological invasion'.

In order to arrest its spread and possible damages, research and extension wing of forest department has send a proposal to Madhya Pradesh Bio-diversity Board for preliminary exploration of methods for prevention and control of damage due to biological invasion of GALS in and around Indore and Bhopal. "Recent reporting of GALS once again from Bhopal and Dhamod should be considered as an alarm signal warranting need of a proper study followed by prophylactic and remedial measures," said Shrivastav.

Elaborating about the project, he said that it would involve around identification of areas affected by GALS, research on cause of infestation, study of biology, feeding and breeding behaviour and experimentation on control measures of GALS. "Project would have focus on identification of areas specific problems and cost effective environment friendly solutions," he said adding that economic implications of ignoring or shelving the issue could be huge for Madhya Pradesh in coming years.

Atul Shrivastav of Capital Project, Bhopal said that number of GALS is increasing. They are not sure about the reasons for abrupt proliferation of GALS there but general inference is that it has been triggered by climate change.

Dr Vikas Choudhary, who had spotted GALS in some soyabean fields in the region, said that it had made life miserable for people in some parts of Kerela and Karnatka. Its spread in the region can cause huge damage to agriculture and horticulture crops.

Researchers say that giant snail can grow up to eight inches in length and more than four inches in diameter. It can live as long as nine yeas, each snail contains both female and male reproductive organs and every mated adult lays about 1,200 eggs each year.


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Synthetic biology raises playing God fears

HYDERABAD: Is it safe to let humans play God and create new organisms - animals and plants - that have never existed in Mother Nature? The ongoing UN Convention on Biodiversity here is going to address this question on Friday evening, when it decides if countries need to put their heads together to study the new field of synthetic biology.

Synthetic biology is a giant leap forward for genetic engineering, triggering a heated global debate. If genetic engineering attempts to refit and alter the alphabets in the DNA to tweak an existing organism, synthetic biology attempts to rewrite the entire sentence and paragraph in the DNA: it creates organisms vastly different from the original.

Synthetic biology, as the NGO, Friends of Earth, explains, "Instead of swapping genes from one species to another (as in traditional genetic engineering), scientists write entirely new genetic code on a computer, "printing" it out and then inserting it into organisms, or even trying to create life from scratch."

Developers and scientists working in the field hope to produce a new generation of fuels, industrial chemicals and biomedical applications. Synthetic biology evokes a similar spin to nano-technology, where scientists and corporate houses took to revolution in economies and technologies in a big way, in recent times.

Akin to any new technology there are serious apprehensions about scientists coming closer to creating new and complex organisms. Playing God, as some would say, derisively.

The meet will decide if the subject should be scrutinized in detail collectively before more than 180 countries take a call how to regulate the new emerging science, if at all.

Predictably, the countries, which are driving the cutting edge work in synthetic biology, are keen that the international community refrains from imposing any great restrictions or oversight mechanism to monitor what they believe would bring more benefits and greater profits.

Almost the entire civil society and some developing countries are keen to ensure that the new science does not spread and only then its impacts on global diversity are studied on the lines genetic sciences so far.

Come Friday evening, the countries gathered here will decide on how to deploy the principle of 'precautionary principle' to study and monitor this brave, or risky new world of synthetic biology.


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Dolphins population increasing in Harike Wildlife Sanctuary and Beas

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 18 Oktober 2012 | 22.33

AMRITSAR: The number of Platanista Gangetica minor popularly known as Indus River Dolphins in Harike Wildlife Sanctuary and Beas river is believed to be more than a dozen and growing but they face danger from indiscriminate fishing and pollution.

"With the spotting of six dolphins including breeding population together in recent past we are of view that their number could be more than a dozen" informed District Forest Officer (wildlife) Dr M Sudhagar while talking to TOI on Thursday. Earlier the number of dolphins was believed to be 7 after 4 male and 3 female dolphins were spotted in the river. However Chairperson, World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) Punjab Gunbir Singh put the number of dolphins to around 30.

A pair of Dolphins were first sighted in 2007 following which a survey was conducted by experts from WWF which led to the sighting of three adults and two calves.

Sudhagar said WWF was carrying out monthly survey and monitoring of dolphins but no proper survey had been carried out to find out their exact number or any conservation plan had been launched so far.

He said in the 75 kilometer stretch of river Beas there were no natural or man made barriers so there was possibility of increase in the number of dolphins which was also confirmed due to spotting of breeding population of dolphins.

Most of the sightings of dolphins were made near village Karmowal and its 2 to 3 kilometer surroundings. He said since the dolphins were also spotted outside sanctuary area in river Beas so there was need to take measures to protect them . He suggested that the stretch of river Beas from Beas town to Harike could be declared as Bio Diversity Heritage Site or declaring dolphins as State Aquatic Animal besides spreading awareness about their existence . "Barring few educated persons hardly anyone knows about presence of dolphins in Punjab" he said.

Gunbir said WWF had completed survey of three rivers including Ravi,Beas and Satluj ."I think their number is around 30 but we don't have any evidence of existence of dolphins in Ravi or Beas" he said. He informed that WWF was finalizing habitat conservation plan for dolphins which would then be submitted with government for conservation of the rare species of dolphins.

Indus River Dolphin is one of the world's rarest mammal and most endangered cetaceans. Only about 1000 of this unique species exist today in the lower reaches of the Indus River in Pakistan.Their numbers had dramatically declined since the construction of the irrigation system in the Indus.


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UNDP unveils robust environmental strategy

HYDERABAD: The UN Development Programme (UNDP) on Thursday unveiled a robust environmental strategy to address unprecedented levels of global biodiversity loss.

The new strategy was adopted during the 11th Conference of Parties (COP) to the Convention on Biological Diversity here, a UNDP statement said.

It calls for a significant scaling up of investments in 100 countries by 2020.

As part of the plan, UNDP will work with governments to save biodiversity and manage eco-systems across 1.4 billion hectares of land and bodies of water, comparable to the area of Australia, India and Argentina combined.

"Human survival depends heavily on biodiversity and healthy ecosystems, yet in recent decades, the world has experienced unprecedented biodiversity loss and ecosystem degradation, undermining the very foundations of life on earth," said UN Under-Secretary-General and UNDP Associate Administrator Rebeca Grynspan.

"As 1.2 billion people living in severe poverty depend directly on nature for their basic needs and livelihoods, this needs urgent international attention."

Under this new strategy, UNDP will work with governments to find new ways to finance biodiversity management through domestic revenue, innovative financial mechanisms, and donor funding from a range of sources.

This includes the Global Environment Facility (GEF), which serves as the financial mechanism of the Convention on Biological Diversity and has been a major driver for conservation in the past two decades.

The funding will be used for projects which foster economic growth, create jobs, protect endangered species and habitats, and help build resilient communities that maintain natural areas for agricultural support and as a buffer against natural disasters such as droughts and floods.

UNDP manages the largest portfolio of biodiversity and ecosystems work in the UN system, with 512 projects in 146 countries.


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Maneka Gandhi comes to the rescue of birds, rabbits

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 17 Oktober 2012 | 22.33

LUCKNOW: A timely tip-off from NGO People For Animals (PFA) and pressure from former union minister and MP Maneka Gandhi saved the lives of hundreds of birds and rabbits as the railway police late Tuesday intercepted a consignment of animals and birds meant for delivery in Kanpur.

The police intercepted the consignment in Ghaziabad on board the Kalka-Delhi passenger train.

At the time of the seizure, more than 100 birds and a dozen rabbits had died due to asphyxia. The rest, among them also the rare zebra finch, were safely recovered.

Government Railway Police (GRP) registered a case against unknown smugglers. The consignment was booked from Saharanpur by one Mohammad Fareed.

Police said they were informed by Aasima Sunil, a representative of People for Animals, Ghaziabad.

PFA activists sought the stoppage of the train and the rescue of the animals, but rail men pleaded helplessness. That was when Maneka Gandhi swung into action and got senior railway board members to order the stoppage of the train.

Late Tuesday evening, the train was stopped in Ghaziabad.

The brake van was checked and the consignment of animals was discovered.

The parcel was headed to New Delhi, from where it was to be transferred into some other train going to Kanpur, a police official said.


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Paleontologists demystify most fearsome monster

LONDON: Predator X, a gigantic, big-headed marine reptile 50-foot long and hailed as the most fearsome prehistoric creature, has finally been named and described, while the hype overshadowed the facts.

A team from the University of Oslo uncovered two big pliosaurs, short-necked, large jawed marine reptiles, with a bite four times as powerful as Tyrannosaurus Rex, between 2004 and and 2012 on the Arctic island of Svalbard.

Previously the only pliosaur remains found on the island was a section of tail vertebra, so the find was hailed as a major discovery.

The specimen dubbed Predator X got greater fame, while the other enjoyed five minutes in the spotlight as The Monster, the Norwegian Journal of Geology reported.

Paleontologists Espen Knutsen, Patrick Druckenmiller and Jorn Hurum have now named the creatures Pliosaurus funkei, and they admit the remains of both only offer partial views of what this marine apex predator was like alive, according to the Daily Mail.

Svalbard's regular freeze-thaw cycles have severely fragmented the fossilised skeletons, the trio reported, and some parts further degraded as they dried them out in the lab.

Efforts to figure out the size of Pliosaurus funkei were complicated by this incomplete nature of the remains, with the paleontologists only able to estimate the size of their specimens based on measurements of other pliosaurs.

Both creatures had originally been estimated at a monstrous 50-feet long - making them the biggest pliosaurs ever found, according to Hurum, professor, when he announced the discovery. The new paper shrinks the beast somewhat.


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Government to take step to check rhino poaching

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 16 Oktober 2012 | 22.33

Assam govt and Centre are formulating a comprehensive plan to stop such Rhino poaching incidents and save the species.

GUWAHATI: Under fire for the recent killing of rhinos in Assam, Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi today said the state and Centre are formulating a comprehensive plan to stop such incidents and save the species.

"We are looking at measures to stop poaching and also reduce deaths of rhinos due to flood. A policy is being worked upon," Gogoi told reporters here.

He said besides involving locals living in the vicinity of Kaziranga National Park, Manas National Park and Pobitora Wildlife Sanctuary, the government is also working on steps like floodlighting and fencing sensitive areas.

"Recently union Environment Minister Jayanthi Natarajan was here and she assured all help from Centre, including boats and aircraft. The guards in the reserve areas are also being provided with sophisticated weapons," he said.

On the issue of flood, Gogoi said over 40 lakh people were affected and 151 lost their lives during the three waves which hit the state this year. Over ten lakh people took shelter in camps after being displaced by floods.

"However, as of today the situation has improved and only 1,920 person are still living in camps, five of which are still operating," he said.

The Chief Minister said steps like help for farmers to have a good rabi crop are being taken to make up the loss in agriculture.

Regarding the recent violence in Bodoland Territorial Area Districts and nearby places, Gogoi said of the total 4.85 lakh displaced, over 3.43 lakh have left for their homes.


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India pledges $50 million for biodiversity conservation

HYDERABAD: India on Tuesday pledged a sum of $50 million for strengthening institutional mechanisms on biodiversity conservation in the country during the next two years.

"I am pleased to launch the Hyderabad Pledge and announce that our government has decided to earmark a sum of $50 million during India's presidency of the Conference of Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity to strengthen the institutional mechanism for biodiversity conservation in India," said Prime Minister Manmohan Singh.

Speaking at the inauguration of the high level segment of the Eleventh Conference of Parties to the Convention on Biological Diversity, he said: "We will use these funds to enhance the technical and human capabilities of our national and state-level mechanisms to attain the Convention on Biological Diversity objectives.

"We have also earmarked funds to promote similar capacity building in developing countries."

On the ongoing debate on environment versus development, the Prime Minister said: "In recent years, it has become increasingly more difficult to find common ground on environmental issues. This is, indeed, unfortunate given that there is today a much higher global awareness of environmental risks and concerns."

"It is this consciousness that should provoke us to greater action even as we cope with the pressures of the current global economic downturn," he said.

Asking countries to ratify the Nagoya Protocol, the Prime mMinister said: "India has recently ratified the Nagoya Protocol and formalised our commitment to it. I would urge all the Parties to do likewise. I am, however, glad that negotiations regarding biodiversity have achieved remarkable success."

The Nagoya Protocol is an international legally binding treaty that works towards conservation of biological diversity, sustainable use of its components and fair and equitable sharing of benefits arising from genetic resources.

"Despite global efforts, the 2010 biodiversity target that we had set for ourselves under the Convention on Biological Diversity was not fully met. This situation needs to change. The critical issue really is how to mobilise the necessary financial, technical and human resources, particularly the incubation, sharing and transfer of technology," he said.

Manmohan Singh said biodiversity-based livelihood options form the basis of rural survival in many parts of the world.

"Living at the periphery of subsistence, the poor are the most at risk from biodiversity loss. They should not also be the ones to bear the cost of biodiversity conservation while the benefits are enjoyed by society at large.

"India's initiatives acknowledge this correlation between biodiversity conservation and poverty eradication," he said.

About 15,000 delegates from over 185 countries are attending the 11th meeting of the Conference of Parties (COP11) to the Convention on Biodiversity (CBD) COP11, which began October 8 and will continue till Oct 19.

Manmohan Singh also unveiled a pylon and laid the foundation stone for a biodiversity park and museum here to mark the ongoing global biodiversity meet.

Minister for Environment and Forests Jayanthi Natarajan urged the parties to agree to at least some measures for resource mobilization to achieve biodiversity targets by 2020.

Reminding the delegates that the resources mobilisation was unfinished agenda of COP10 at Nagoya, she said if there was no agreement reached again, four years of the 2010-2020 strategic plan would be gone, making it difficult to achieve biodiversity targets, popularly known as Aichi targets.

"It will be a collective failure, which we should avoid at all cost. We once failed to achieve 2010 targets and future generations will not forgive us if we fail again in 2012," she said.

Hailing PM Manmohan Singh's announcement, Braulio Dias, executive secretary, CBD, appealed to all parties and partners to the CBD to become a regional or global champions for biodiversity and the achievement of one or more of the Aichi targets.

He asked the nations not to see biodiversity as costs but as investments that will pay back with significant environmental, social and economic benefits for all societies.

UNEP executive director Achim Steiner, Japan's minister for Environment Hiroyuki Nagahama and Andhra Pradesh chief minister N Kiran Kumar Reddy also spoke on the occasion.


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India positive about outcome of UN biodiversity convention

Written By Unknown on Senin, 15 Oktober 2012 | 22.33

HYDERABAD: Expressing happiness over the way negotiations are proceeding in the ongoing UN convention on biological diversity, India on Monday expressed confidence that agreement would be reached on all the significant issues among the member countries.

"For the first week of COP, we made significant progress. Four documents have been adopted in the COP, which happens very rarely. It is indicative of the good mood, which is prevailing among the delegates. I think that is a very positive signal," M F Farooqui, Special Secretary, Ministry of Environment and Forests, told reporters here.

India assumed presidency of the CBD at the ongoing Conference of Parties (COP).

The documents that have been adopted, are related to GlobalStrategy on Plant Conservation, Global Taxonomy Initiative, Biofuels and Biodiversity and Incentive measures, he said.

Noting that good progress has already been made, he said two working groups, various contact groups and the friends of chair, which have been constituted, are working parallel.

"We are very confident that the remaining issues will also get resolved well in time. Our effort is to resolve all the issues by Thursday evening at the negotiators' level so that we have the documents ready for adoption on Friday and tomorrow there is going to be the high-level segment. It will be formally inaugurated by the Prime Minister," he said.

The high-level segment would deliberate on Strategic Plan and Resource Mobilisation, Biodiversity and Livelihood, Marine and Coastal Biodiversity and the early ratification of Nagoya Protocol, Farooqui said.

"We are confident that the high-level discussion will provide big political impetus and provide the necessary signal wherever required for other negotiators to move forward in a constructive spirit, which they are already demonstrating. We are extremely hopeful of a good outcome of the COP," he said.


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25 primate species reported on brink of extinction

NEW DELHI: Twenty-five species of monkeys, langurs, lemurs and gorillas are on the brink of extinction and need global action to protect them from increasing deforestation and illegal trafficking, researchers said Monday.

Six of the severely threatened species live in the island nation of Madagascar, off southeast Africa. Five more from mainland Africa, five from South America and nine species in Asia are among those listed as most threatened.

The report by the International Union for Conservation of Nature was released at the United Nations' Convention on Biological Diversity being held in the southern Indian city of Hyderabad.

Primates, mankind's closest living relatives, contribute to the ecosystem by dispersing seeds and maintaining forest diversity.

Conservation efforts have helped several species of primates that are no longer listed as endangered, said the report, prepared every two years by some of the world's leading primate experts.

The report, which counts species and subspecies of primates across the world, noted that Madagascar's lemurs are severely threatened by habitat destruction and illegal hunting, which has accelerated dramatically since the change of power in the country in 2009.

Among the most severely hit was the northern sportive lemur, with only 19 known individuals left in the wild in Madagascar.

"Lemurs are now one of the world's most endangered groups of mammals, after more than three years of political crisis and a lack of effective enforcement in their home country, Madagascar," said Christoph Schwitzer of the Bristol Conservation and Science Foundation, one of the groups involved in the study.

"A similar crisis is happening in Southeast Asia, where trade in wildlife is bringing many primates very close to extinction," Schwitzer said.

More than half of the world's 633 types of primates are in danger of becoming extinct because of human activity such as the burning and clearing of tropical forests, the hunting of primates for food and the illegal wildlife trade.

While the situation appears dire for some species, wildlife researchers say conservation efforts are beginning to pay off, with several primates being removed from the list, now in its seventh edition.

India's lion-tailed macaque and Madagascar's greater bamboo lemur have been taken off the endangered inventory for 2012 after the targeted species appeared to have recovered.

Also, conservation efforts have ensured that the world did not lose a single primate species to extinction in the 20th century, and no primate has been declared extinct so far this century, said Russell A. Mittermeier, president of Conservation International and the chairman of the IUCN Species Survival Commission's primate specialist group.

"Amazingly, we continue to discover new species every year since 2000. What is more, primates are increasingly becoming a major ecotourism attraction, and primate-watching is growing in interest," Mittermeier said.

In a separate report on global urbanization released Monday at the Hyderabad conference, the United Nations urged urban planners to incorporate green spaces in cities as more and more people move away from rural areas in search of work.

Green areas in big cities perform important ecological functions, such as "filtering dust, absorbing carbon dioxide from the air and improving air quality," the Convention on Biological Diversity said in its new assessment.

The "Cities and Biodiversity Outlook" is the first global analysis of how urban land expansion will impact biodiversity in the coming decades.

The world's total urban area is expected to triple between 2000 and 2030, with urban populations set to double to around 4.9 billion in the same period.

Data from the United Kingdom show that a 10 percent increase in tree canopy cover in cities may result in a 3-4 degree Celsius decrease in ambient temperature, thus reducing energy used for air conditioning, the report said.

Urban biodiversity also delivers important health benefits, with studies showing that proximity to trees can reduce the prevalence of childhood asthma and allergies.


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99% crash in vulture population: Report

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 14 Oktober 2012 | 22.33

MUMBAI: There has been a 99 per cent crash in the vulture population from the mid of 1990s till now, reported the Bombay Natural History Society (BNHS). The main reason for the depleting population was found to be a veterinary drug given to cattle, whose carcass the vultures are known to consume.

The BNHS reports said that the Diclofenac veterinary use was the prime reason for the crash in vulture population as the vultures devouring cattle treated with the drug, died of kidney failure. The Diclofenac veterinary use was banned by government of India in 2006 after advocacy by the BNHS and other animal rights organizations, human Diclofenac is still used for cattle. Though, after repeated campaigns, the drug use has been brought down, potentially unsafe drugs like Ketoprofen and Aceclofenac are still used in veterinary.

BNHS is currently running three vulture breeding centres with RSPB and state government help in Haryana, West Bengal and Assam. Five other centres are running in various states by the government. BNHS would be releasing 600 pairs for the three endangered Gyps vultures into the wild. BNHS doing double clutching of vulture eggs in captivity, wherein the first laid egg is removed for artificial incubation, so that the pair lays another egg·

BNHS intends to release 600 pairs of the three Gyps vulture species eventually into the wild·


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Sixty elephants creating havoc at Arunachal village

ITANAGAR: A herd of 60 elephants has been creating havoc at Mer village in East Siang district since the last couple of days damaging crops.

The district forests authority swung into action after being informed of the menace created by the pachyderms with DFO B Darang asking the officers to look into the man-animal conflict and help villagers.

Darang also instructed the range forest officer at Mebo to assess the extent of damages.

He said that necessary arrangement has been made to tackle the raiding jumbos.

"More Kunki elephants (tamed elephants to drive away the wild ones) will be used while involving local people on wage basis. Crackers have been purchased to be used for the purpose," he added.

Meanwhile, Mer anchal samiti member (ASM) Vinod Perme said that more elephants have joined the herd whose number has gone up to around 60.

"To our utter dismay, more elephants have joined the herd on Friday last causing more tension to the villagers around, including Paglam area of Lower Dibang valley," he said.


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'Floods aid Kaziranga ecosystem, but need to save animals'

Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 13 Oktober 2012 | 22.33

HYDERABAD: The floods that hit Kaziranga National Park in Assam, a UNESCO natural heritage site, actually help in maintaining its ecosystem, but various steps need to be taken to ensure that animals there do not face threat to their lives, wildlife experts say.

"Kaziranga National Park and Manas National Park (both in Assam) cannot be world heritage sites without the flood. When Brahmaputra floods and goes back, the grass grows again. That is why there are so many deer and so many tigers.

"Ecosystem is kept alive by the new grass and new growth which is because of the floods. So its good for Kaziranga, but bad for individual animals," Vivek Menon, executive director of conservation organisation Wildlife Trust of India (WTI), said at the ongoing UN convention on biological diversity.

A large number of animals are believed to have perished due to the recent floods in Kaziranga and some poached when they tried to escape.

P C Bhattacharjee, executive trustee of WTI and a former professor, suggested that the animals can be rescued in boats in flood situations and high rise platforms be provided to enable animals to save themselves.

"Floods will be there. You have to cope with human beings and animals. Now animals do not know where to go. So, there must be high lands and provisioning for flood during stress. Flood preparation should be good. Its like a disaster preparation," he said here.

The government has to take major steps in saving the animals with others, including voluntary organisations, supporting the efforts, he said.

M K Ranjitsinh, chairman of WTI, said measures like erecting platforms and bringing nearby hills under the control of the park to prevent poaching can be done to ensure that no harm is caused to the animals. Some platforms have already been put in place.

Secondly, the traffic on nearby road need to be regulated to prevent road kill, he added.


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Governmant to allow Indians to possess eagle feathers

WASHINGTON: The Justice Department said Friday it is going to allow members of federally recognized American-Indian tribes to possess eagle feathers, although that's a federal crime.

This is a significant religious and cultural issue for many tribes, who were consulted in advance about the policy the department announced.

The Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act and other federal wildlife laws criminalize the killing of eagles, which are listed as either endangered or threatened, and possession of feathers and bird parts, but the Constitution and federal laws also give tribes local sovereignty for self-government.

Under the new Justice Department policy, tribal members will not be prosecuted for wearing or carrying federally protected birds, bird feathers or parts. They also may pick up feathers found in the wild as long as they do not disturb federally protected birds or nests. Giving, lending or trading feathers or bird parts among tribe members, without any other compensation, also will be allowed.

While Justice did not previously have a written policy, the new directive is in line with long-standing practice by Justice prosecutors, U.S. attorneys and the Interior Department not to prosecute in such circumstances.

But the Justice Department will continue to prosecute tribe members and nonmembers alike for violating federal laws that prohibit killing eagles and other migratory birds or the buying or selling the feathers or other bird parts.

In addition, members of federally recognized tribes are covered by the new Justice Department policy regardless of whether they have a U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service permit, Attorney General Eric Holder said in a memo to U.S. attorney offices around the country.

Holder said the new policy was issued to address concerns of tribal members who were unsure of how they might be affected by federal wildlife law enforcement efforts, particularly whether a permit would be required. The Fish and Wildlife Service issues a very limited number of permits for Indians to kill eagles in the wild or obtain feathers and carcasses of accidentally killed eagles from a federal repository.

Doug Craven, the natural resources director for the Little Traverse Bay Bands of Odawa Indians in Michigan, said tribal members there frequently encounter feathers from around 25 bald eagle nesting sites on their reservation. But it wasn't always clear to them whether they could keep the feathers for ceremonial use or if they'd have to send them off to a repository.

``They feel that's been gifted to them and they have a responsibility for that feather,'' said Craven, who was part of a group consulting with the Justice Department on the eagle feather policy. ``This policy supports that.''

While tradition and customs vary widely among the more than 500 federally recognized tribes, a high reverence for eagles is fairly consistent.

Holder said the new Justice Department policy strikes the right balance between enforcing wildlife laws that protect eagles and respecting the cultural and religious practices of federally recognized Indian tribes.

``From time immemorial, many native Americans have viewed eagle feathers and other bird parts as sacred elements of their religious and cultural traditions,'' said Assistant Attorney General Ignacia Moreno, head of the department's environment and natural resources division. She called the new policy ``a major step forward by establishing a consistent and transparent policy to guide federal enforcement of the nation's wildlife laws.''

Currently, a federal depository near Denver holds the carcasses of eagles that are killed by contact with power lines or other causes. Indians may apply for a feather or a carcass. There is a wait to get the feathers.

The Fish and Wildlife Service has issued a few permits allowing tribes to kill eagles in the wild. The Hopi Tribe has killed golden eagles under a federal permit for years. The Northern Arapaho Tribe of Wyoming received a federal permit from the Fish and Wildlife Service earlier this year that would allow the tribe to take up to two bald eagles a year for use in the tribe's annual Sun Dance.

However, the Northern Arapaho are suing the Fish and Wildlife Service in federal court. The tribe argues the federal permit is meaningless because it would limit the tribe to killing bald eagles outside the Wind River Indian Reservation, but a Wyoming state law prohibits killing eagles outside the reservation.


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