Peru Tribe Battles Oil Giant Over Pollution

Peru tribe battles oil giant over pollution
By Dan Collyns
BBC News, Loreto, Peru

Achuar’s spiritual leader, Tomas Maynas

Tomas Maynas says fish died and crops wilted. It is a familiar story. Big business
moves into a pristine wilderness and starts destroying the environment and by turn
the livelihoods of the indigenous people who live there.

But in a reversal of plot, there are now cases of people living traditional
lifestyles who are now invading the territory of the big companies and taking them
on at their own game.

The story of the Achuar tribe living in the Amazon rainforest of north-eastern Peru
is one of them.

Last year, they filed a class action lawsuit against oil giant Occidental Petroleum,
in Los Angeles.

Now they are awaiting a judge’s decision on whether the case can proceed in the US or
will be sent back to Peru, where it stands little chance of coming to court.

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Book Review: Climate Change and the Rise and Fall of Civilizations

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“Fagan says we’re now entering another era of extreme aridity, and that the
challenges of adapting to water shortages and crop failures won’t be easy.”

“The bad news is that elites try to super-manage their way out of droughts,
with disastrous results for ordinary people.”

” …for ordinary readers, Fagan’s book serves as another warning about a true
marvel: It only takes a temperature change of a
Celsius degree or two to rapidly
unsettle the order of things.”
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The Globe and Mail (Toronto, Ontario, Canada)
March 22, 2008

ENVIRONMENT

We’ve been here before, and it wasn’t pretty the first time
ANDREW NIKIFORUK

THE GREAT WARMING

Climate Change and the Rise and Fall of Civilizations

By Brian Fagan

Bloomsbury, 282 pages, $29.95

While the Arctic melts and our glaciers
disappear, one by one, like guests at a
late-night party, Canada’s political elites
remain the only guys too drunk to recognize that
the climate is changing. Let’s face it: Global
warming probably will never sober up Conservative
or Liberal leaders as long as tar-sands taxes
fill the federal treasury, lower the GST and give
the loonie a petro swagger. And they are not the
first group of rulers to ignore the weather.

During the medieval ages, a great warming similar
to our fossil-fuelled meltdown profoundly changed
civilizations from the Norse to the Khmer.
Archeologists call it the Medieval Warm Period,
and it served up a “silent and oft-ignored
killer”: drought. The dry-out even parched much
of present-day Alberta.

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Government Misses ESA Deadline for Ice Seal Threatened by Warming

Government Misses Endangered Species Act Deadline for Ice Seal Threatened by
Global Warming; Conservation Group Initiates Legal Process to Enforce Deadline

SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA – March 21 – Today the Center for Biological Diversity
notified the National Marine Fisheries Service of its intent to file suit against
the agency for missing the first deadline in the Endangered Species Act listing
process for the ribbon seal, imperiled by global warming and the melting of its
sea-ice habitat in the Bering Sea off Alaska.

The Endangered Species Act listing process was initiated by a scientific petition
filed by the Center on December 20, 2007. The Fisheries Service, a branch of the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, was required to issue an initial
determination on the petition within 90 days. Following a positive initial finding
on the petition to list the ribbon seal, the Fisheries Service will be required to
commence a full status review for the species, the next step in the listing process
which precedes the decision whether to propose the species for listing as
threatened or endangered.

“The Arctic is in a crisis state from global warming,” said Shaye Wolf, a biologist
with the Center for Biological Diversity and lead author of the ribbon seal petition.
“An entire ecosystem is rapidly melting away, and we stand to lose not just the
polar bear, but also the ribbon seal and all other ice-dependent species if we do not
immediately take action to address global warming.”

The ribbon seal is dependent on Arctic sea ice for survival. During the late winter
through early summer, ribbon seals rely on the edge of the sea ice in the Bering and
Okhotsk seas off Alaska and Russia as safe habitat for giving birth and as a nursery
for their pups. But this winter sea-ice habitat is rapidly disappearing. If current
ice-loss trends from global warming continue, the ribbon seal faces likely extinction
by the end of the century.

The ribbon seal’s winter sea-ice habitat is projected to decline 40 percent by mid-
century under recent greenhouse gas emissions trends. Any remaining sea ice will be
much thinner and unlikely to last long enough for ribbon seals to finish rearing their
pups, leading to widespread pup mortality. Disturbingly, warming in the Arctic is
occurring at a rapid pace that is exceeding the predictions of the most advanced climate
models. Summer sea-ice extent in 2007 plummeted to a record minimum, which most climate
models forecast would not be reached until 2050.

In addition to loss of its sea-ice habitat from global warming, the ribbon seal faces
threats from oil and gas development in its habitat, and the growth of shipping in the
increasingly ice-free Arctic. Last month, important summer feeding areas for the ribbon
seal in the Chukchi Sea were leased for oil development, while seismic surveys are
planned for the area this summer.

“With rapid action to reduce carbon dioxide, methane, and black carbon emissions,
combined with a moratorium on new oil-and-gas development and shipping routes in the
Arctic, we can still save the ribbon seal, the polar bear, and the entire Arctic
ecosystem,” said Brendan Cummings, oceans program director for the Center. “But the
window of opportunity to act is closing rapidly.”

While the Fisheries Service has not yet published a finding on the ribbon seal as
required by law, on March 13 the agency briefly posted a press release to its Website
entitled “NOAA to Study Ice Seals for Possible Listing under Endangered Species Act.”
The press release announced a positive initial finding on the Center’s ribbon seal
petition. However, when the Center requested a copy of the finding, a spokesperson for
the Fisheries Service stated that the press release had been posted in error and refused
to say when the finding would be released. The press release has been removed from the
Fisheries Service’s Web site.

“The fact that the Fisheries Service drafted and posted a press release announcing a
positive finding on the ribbon seal petition clearly indicates that the scientists have
finished their review and believe the species may in fact need the protections of the
Endangered Species Act,” said Cummings. “Continued delay in releasing the required
finding can only be the result of politics, not science.”

Under the Endangered Species Act, seals, whales, and dolphins are under the jurisdiction
of the Fisheries Service, while polar bears and walruses are under the jurisdiction of the
Fish and Wildlife Service. The Fish and Wildlife Service is more than two months late in
issuing a final rule to protect the polar bear; a decision on the Center’s petition to
protect the Pacific walrus is due in May 2008.

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Fish Populations Critical to Reef Climate Survival

Fish key to reef climate survival
By Richard Black
Environment correspondent, BBC News website

Life on the Reef

In pictures
A healthy fish population could be the key to ensuring coral reefs survive the impacts
of climate change, pollution, overfishing and other threats.

Australian scientists found that some fish act as “lawnmowers”, keeping coral free of
kelp and unwanted algae.

At a briefing to parliamentarians in Canberra, they said protected areas were rebuilding
fish populations in some parts of the Great Barrier Reef.

Warming seas are likely to affect the reef severely within a few decades.

Pollution is also a growing problem, particularly fertilisers that wash from agricultural
land into water around the reef, stimulating the growth of plants that stifle the coral.

Protect and survive

The assembled experts told parliamentarians that fish able to graze on invading plants
played a vital role in the health of reef ecosystems.

Because sea temperatures are now a lot higher, they are now reaching the thresholds at
which coral get into distress.

Professor Ove Hoegh-Guldberg, University of Queensland, said:
“The Great Barrier Reef is still a resilient system… and herbivorous fish play a
critical role in that regenerative capacity, by keeping the dead coral space free of
algae, so that new juvenile coral can re-establish themselves,” said Professor Terry
Hughes from James Cook University in Townsville.

His research group has conducted experiments which involved building cages to keep fish
away from sections of reef.

They found that three times as much new coral developed in areas where the fish were
present as in the caged portions.

Parrotfish in particular use their serrated jaws to scrape off incipient algae and plants.

More recently, his team has also identified the rabbit fish – a brown, bland-looking
species – as a potentially important harvester of seaweed.

“So managing fisheries can help to maintain the reef’s resilience to future climate
change,” he said.

The parrotfish performs a vital role as a “lawnmower” of the reef.

In recent years, Marine Protected Areas have been set up along the Great Barrier Reef
in order to provide sanctuaries where fish and other marine creatures can grow and develop.

Dr Peter Doherty from the Australian Institute of Marine Science presented data showing
that just two years of protection brought significant increases in populations of important
species such as coral trout and tropical snapper.

“More importantly, more eggs are being produced… nearly three times the number of eggs per
unit area being produced in the surrounding territory,” he said.

The eggs, he showed, travelled well outside the boundaries of the protected zones,
potentially increasing fish populations in non-protected areas too.

Burning issue

The scientists emphasised that a comprehensive approach to reef protection would include
measures to lower greenhouse gas emissions and to reduce run-off from agricultural land
and human settlements along the coast.

“You have got a three- to nine-fold increase in sediment loss,” said Professor Iain Gordon
from the governmental research organisation CSIRO.

“[There are] increases in nutrients that feed into the system, nitrates and phosphates and
also new kinds of chemicals in the water that is around the reef; pesticides and herbicides,
they haven’t been there before.”

Professor Ove Hoegh-Guldberg from the University of Queensland noted that unusually warm
water in 1998 and 2002 had bleached and damaged coral in southern parts of the Barrier Reef.

High water temperatures cause coral to bleach, sometimes irreversibly.

“The reef literally goes from being brown and healthy to being a stark white, and this
happens with very small changes in temperature,” he said.

In the past, he said, bleaching events happened only at the warm extremes of natural cycles
such as El Nino; but now the overall water temperature is higher, which makes the peaks of
the cycles more harmful to coral.

“Because sea temperatures are now a lot higher, they are now reaching the thresholds at
which coral get into distress, and of course it is really large scale impacts.”

At high temperatures, coral polyps expel the algae which normally live with them in a
symbiotic relationship, turning the reef white. The algae typically provide most of the
polyp’s nutrition; without them, the polyps eventually die.

Even if a bleached zone contains live polyps and carries the potential to recover when waters
cool, a quick invasion of kelp, or types of algae that do not live symbiotically with coral,
can make the die-off permanent – hence the protective role of plant-munchng fish.

The Great Barrier Reef is worth about six billion Australian dollars (US$5.5bn; £2.8bn) to the
national economy, primarily through tourism and fishing.

Richard.Black-INTERNET@bbc.co.uk

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