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  • Chinese farms cause more pollution than factories, says official survey

     

    Despite the sharp upward revision of figures on rural contamination, the government suggested the country’s pollution problem may be close to – or even past – a peak. That claim is likely to prompt scepticism among environmental groups.

     

    Anti-pollution riots break out in China
    Chinese villagers storm factory blamed for lead poisoning of 600 children
    • Chinese citizens set to launch first ever environmental lawsuit against government

    The release of the groundbreaking report was reportedly delayed by resistance from the agriculture ministry, which had previously insisted that farms contributed only a tiny fraction of pollution in China.

    The census disproves these claims completely. According to the study, agriculture is responsible for 43.7% of the nation’s chemical oxygen demand (the main measure of organic compounds in water), 67% of phosphorus and 57% of nitrogen discharges.

    At the launch of the paper, Wang Yangliang of the ministry of agriculture recognised the fall-out from intensive farming methods.

    “Fertilisers and pesticides have played an important role in enhancing productivity but in certain areas improper use has had a grave impact on the environment,” he said. “The fast development of livestock breeding and aquaculture has produced a lot of food but they are also major sources of pollution in our lives.”

    He said the ministry would introduce measures to improve the efficiency of pesticide and fertiliser use, to expand biogas generation from animal waste, and to change agricultural lifestyles to protect the environment.

    While the high figure for rural pollution is partly explained by the immense size of China’s agricultural sector, it also reflects the country’s massive dependency on artificial farm inputs such as fertilisers.

    The government says this is necessary because China uses only 7% of the world’s land to feed 22% of the global population. An industrial lobby is pushing for even greater use of chemicals. It includes the huge power company CNOOC, which runs the country’s largest nitrogen fertiliser factory in Hainan’s Dongfang City.

    But the returns on this chemical investment are poor. According to a recent Greenpeace report, the country consumes 35% of the world’s nitrogen fertiliser, which wastes energy and other resources, while adding to water pollution and greenhouse gas emissions.

    “Agricultural pollution has become one of China’s gravest environmental crises,” said Greenpeace campaign director Sze Pangcheung. “China needs to step up the fight against the overuse of fertilisers and pesticides and promote ecological agriculture which has obvious advantages for human heath, the environment, and sustainable development of agriculture.”

    Wen Tiejun, dean of the school of agriculture and rural development at Renmin university, said the survey should be used as a turning point. His research suggested that Chinese farmers used almost twice as much fertiliser as they needed.

    “For almost all of China’s 5,000-year history, agriculture had given our country a carbon-absorbing economy but in the past 40 years, agriculture has become one of the top pollution sources,” he said. “Experience shows that we don’t have to rely on chemical farming to resolve the food security issue. The government needs to foster low-pollution agriculture.”

    But in what appears to be a statistical sleight of hand, the government said the new agricultural data and other figures from the census would not be used to evaluate the success of its five-year plan to reduce pollution by 10%.

    Zhang Lijun, the environmental protection vice-minister, claimed China was cleaning up its pollution problem far faster than other countries during their dirty stage of development.

    “Because China follows a different pattern of development, it is very likely that pollution will peak when per capita income reaches US$3,000,” he said, comparing this with the $8,000 he said was the norm in other nations.

    If true, it would suggest the worst of China’s pollution problems may already be over. According to the World Bank and International Monetary Fund, per capita incomes in China have already passed this point. If exchange rates and a low cost of living are factored in, Chinese incomes may be equivalent to more than $6,000.

    But Zhang’s claim is contestable. As countless pollution scandals have revealed, many industries and local governments routinely under-report emissions and waste.

    Many harmful or controversial forms of pollution are either not measured – as is the case for carbon dioxide and small particle emissions – or the data is not made public, as is the case for ozone.

    Zheng said the government would expand its monitoring system in the next five-year plan.

    Extracts from China’s first pollution report (for 2007):

    • Sulphur dioxide emissions 23.2 million tonnes (91.3% from industry)

    • Nitrogen oxide emissions: 18 million tonnes (30% from vehicles)

    • Chemical oxygen demand discharges: 30.3 billion tonnes (44% from agriculture)

    • Soot: 11.7 million tonnes.

    • Solid waste: 3.8 billion tonnes (of which 45.7m tonnes is hazardous)

    • Heavy metal discharges: 900 tonnes

    • Livestock faeces: 243 million tonnes.

    • Livestock urine: 163 million tonnes

    • Plastic film on cropfields: 121,000 tonnes (80.3% recycled

  • And That’s Strike Three For Garrett

     

    All three programs point to serious shortcomings in the ability of the federal Environment Department to manage large-scale public policy roll-outs — for which it historically has had little responsibility.

    Another issue seems to have been a catastrophic failure on behalf of the department to forecast demand. All three schemes in question have been wildly popular: so popular in fact that they quickly soaked up all the available contractors in their industries. Financed by government incentives, this massive new demand then began to suck in fly-by-night contractors and opportunists keen for a piece of the action. Unskilled, untrained workers were employed in their thousands, many of them students and young people looking for holiday work or some extra cash. The results have been tragic.

    Why the Environment Department got its forecasts so wrong is somewhat of a mystery. An elementary grasp of economics and public administration should have been all that was required to realise that consumers respond to incentives. Just look at the Australian housing market, which has proved itself highly sensitive to government incentives like the First Home Owners Grant. It should have been obvious that injecting hundreds of millions into previously small industries would cause major structural dislocations.

    This was exactly what happened with Garrett’s $8,000 solar rebate last year, which proved so popular with householders that it eventually ran $850 million over budget. Garrett had to pull the plug three weeks early, with only 24 hours notice. In this week’s Senate Estimates testimony, it emerged that some solar contractors have still not been paid by the Environment Department.

    The multi-billion dollar insulation roll-out proved equally popular. Created as part of the Government’s economic stimulus package, the program was specifically designed to quickly shovel billions of dollars out of Treasury coffers in order to combat the global financial crisis. Speed was of the essence: an Environment Department media release from early 2009 proudly announces that Garrett was “fast-tracking” the insulation scheme. Little thought appears to have been given to whether the Australian home insulation industry had the capacity or the workforce to deliver such a massive program.

    This is where Garrett’s protestations that the blame must rest with shoddy contractors runs aground. Almost as soon as the stimulus measure was announced, a sudden boom began to sweep the industry. And soon after that, accidents started to happen. Houses burnt down. Contractors died.

    For instance, in November alone two young Queensland installers died as a result of shoddy work practices. One particularly distressing death occurred outside Rockhampton, where 16-year-old Rueben Barnes died after being electrocuted while installing foil insulation.

    But electrocution is just one of the risks faced by untrained subcontractors looking for extra cash. Reports have reached newmatilda.com of endemic unreported workplace accidents, like contractors falling through ceilings because they weren’t standing on roof beams. On 24 November, a man died of heatstroke while installing insulation in Western Sydney. As the Sydney Morning Herald reported at the time, “the man had been employed by a subcontractor as a casual worker and … he was not adequately qualified to install insulation”.

    It has since emerged that Master Electricians had warned the Environment Department of these risks well before November. In October, the CEO of the Master Electricians, Malcolm Richards, called for an end to the insulation rebate because of the electrocution and fire risk. It now seems as though hundreds and perhaps even thousands of homes may be “live” — in other words: potential death-traps. The Federal Government will now pay to inspect more than 48,000 homes to check for problems, potentially costing as much as $50 million.

    And yet despite the warnings, Garrett acted cautiously and incrementally. Last year, he worked to introduce mandatory training requirements for insulation installers. After the electrocution deaths last November, he banned the use of metal staples (which you would have thought posed an obvious risk). But it has taken until now for the Environment Minister to decisively end the program.

    Despite a terrible week, the Government is so far standing by its troubled Environment Minister. Senior front-benchers, including Chris Bowen and Julia Gillard, have been given the task of publicly defending Garrett. Labor’s strategists have clearly decided that Garrett remains an asset, rather than a liability, but his accident-prone performance in the job must also have disappointed those who touted the former rock star as a future leader.

    In some respects, of course, Garrett is not to blame. Clearly, his department has shown itself woefully incapable of carrying out the ambitious new responsibilities given to it under Rudd. But in politics, what matters is what happens on your watch, no matter whether you personally knew about it. Garrett has taken a significant hit in this scandal. Another scandal before the election could finish his ministerial career.

  • Scientists shed light on hydrogen fuel project

    Scientists shed light on hydrogen fuel project

    ABC February 12, 2010, 9:00 am

     

    Researchers from the University of Wollongong, on the New South Wales south coast, are part of a group to have developed new technology with the potential to make hydrogen fuel from water.

    The process would occur using sunlight from solar panels on suburban homes and schools.

    The research group has obtained patent status in Australia for the technology and has applied for a patent to protect intellectual property rights in the United States.

    Dr Gerhard Swiegers from the Intelligent Polymer Research Institute says researches have been able to mimic the process of photosynthesis that occurs in plants.

    “Hydrogen is of course a fuel. You can burn hydrogen in your car like you can burn petrol or diesel. In fact, there are a number of hydrogen-powered cars already out there,” he said.

    “What we are effectively doing is converting sunlight, the energy in sunlight, into a transportation fuel, namely hydrogen.”

    While the technology is still some years away from commercial production, it has attracted strong interest in the United States where hydrogen power cars are in development.

    Dr Swiegers says the technology has great commercial potential.

    “Potentially we will be able to build a solar cell which you can put on your roof, the roof of your home, and then it will split water for you and make hydrogen for you at home which you could fill your car up with,” he said.

    The University of Wollongong is collaborating with teams from Princeton University in the United States, Monash University and the CSIRO.

  • Peak oil: the summit that dominates the horizon

     

    These “peak oil” believers say the high point of oil output could even have passed already. They argue it will take 10 years to develop the likes of Tiber while a string of similar discoveries would have to be made at very regular intervals to move the peak point back towards 2030 the projection used in some scenarios put forward by the International Energy Agency.

    The debate has intensified in recent weeks after whistleblowers claimed the IEA figures were unreliable and subject to political manipulation – something the agency categorically denies. But the subject of oil reserves touches not just energy and climate change policy but the wider economic scene, because hydrocarbons still oil the wheels of international trade.

    Even the Paris-based IEA admits that the world still needs to find the equivalent of four new Saudi Arabias to feed increasing demand at a time when the depletion rate in old fields of the North Sea and other major producing areas is running at 7% year on year.

    “The fields which are producing today are going to significantly decline. We are very worried about these trends,” says Fatih Birol, the chief economist at the IEA, who has gradually ramped that depletion figure upwards and has expressed deep concerns at a huge fall-off in the current levels of investment in the sector.

    Birol and the wider industry are certainly well aware that the days of “easy” oil are over. The big international companies such as BP and ExxonMobil are struggling to find enough new oil to replace their exploited reserves year-on-year and Shell found itself on the end of a major fine for exaggerating its reserves report to the Securities & Exchange Commission in the US.

    The energy groups used to rely on the easily exploited shallow waters in the Gulf of Mexico, politically friendly areas of the Middle East and geologically simple reservoirs off Britain to feed their refineries and petrol stations. But as these wells begin to run dry, Big Oil is being forced into ever more physically or politically demanding areas to bring home the crude – at much greater financial cost.

    The Tiber find is just one example. There may be as many as 4bn barrels of oil in place – as much as the North Sea’s Forties field – but the hydrocarbons are located in 4,100 feet of water, which makes them very expensive to extract. And BP admits there can be no guarantee exactly how much can be recovered from the lower tertiary sands of the Gulf.

    The same is true of BG’s find in the Santos Basin off Brazil. The company says at least 2bn “recoverable” barrels are in place, part of an estimated 150bn in what are, again, very deep waters – and in a part of the world that has bittersweet memories for the foreign oil producers.

    Peter Odell, professor emeritus of international energy studies at Erasmus University in Rotterdam but with close links to Opec, says the new finds really are highly significant. “It shows the industry is capable of finding more oil than it uses and shows we have not come to any peak.”

    But that is not accounting for politics and the rise of the “resource nationalism” that has made the multinationals persona non grata in some of the great oil-bearing regions. BP was among the companies that saw its assets seized in a $30bn grab by president Hugo Chavez in Venezuela during 2007, while Exxon resorted to London’s high court to try to wrestle back its interests there.

    Developing countries such as Venezuela, Nigeria and Russia have increasingly been moving down the road to self-reliance, developing their own state-owned firms at the expense of the international players. But this can mean that western know-how and finance is sacrificed, slowing down the rate of oil development if not losing new reserves completely.

    BP, Shell and Exxon have all had tussles with the Kremlin over their oil holdings in Russia, while Shell has found the government in Nigeria increasingly truculent over attempts to re-open the Niger Delta oil wells shut down due to guerrilla action.

    The western firms see part of their salvation coming from being able to enter markets from which they have previously been barred, such as Iraq. But, leaving aside continuing questions about physical safety, both BP and Exxon have signed deals there in recent weeks on terms so tight they would have been inconceivable only a few years ago.

    Exxon repeatedly threatened to walk away from any new involvement in Iraq – still one of the biggest reserve holders in the world – but in the end accepted a paltry deal, under which it would be paid $1.90 per barrel produced. It had been arguing for $4 but originally wanted control of the reserves, not just what amounts to a service fee for production.

    Increasingly, Big Oil is also moving into environmentally sensitive areas that put it in collision with environmentalists, such as the Barents Sea off Norway, the waters around Alaska and – if it can get its hands on it – the Arctic itself.

    In the meantime, the oil companies have moved into all sorts of “unconventional” projects such as “gas-to-liquids” (converting natural gas into petrol and diesel) and, most controversially, the tar sands of western Canada. These reserves offer enormous new quantities of oil but can only be extracted by mining or other methods which themselves require large amounts of energy and water.

    The Athabasca sands being developed by Shell and others in Alberta are a number one hate target for Greenpeace and the new breed of socially responsible investment funds run by the Co-op and others. They could hold reserves of 170bn barrels, making Canada number two behind Saudi Arabia, but are only considered commercially viable if the crude price remains above at least $50 a barrel. In the first three months of the year, Shell alone lost $42m on its oil sands operations as the price of world oil slumped from its 2008 high.

    The oil companies cut back their exploration and development spending in the face of lower crude prices and reduced demand from a recession-hit world. But as central banks continue to pump money into their economies, stock markets recover and China’s industrialisation kicks back into gear, demand for oil has been growing.

    And this is expected to continue. The IEA predicted in the just-published 2009 World Energy Outlook that oil demand would grow from 85m barrels a day today to 88m in 2015 and reach 105m in 2030. The organisation presumes that the challenge of meeting that demand can equally be met with a mixture of higher Opec production and considerably more output from unconventional sources.

    These assumptions became the centre of an explosive debate three weeks ago after the Guardian spoke to IEA insiders who expressed deep concerns about the methodology and “politicisation” of the figures. Some senior figures are unhappy about what they see as over-optimistic forecasts coming out of the agency which represents the interests of 28 consumer countries, particularly the US.

    One whistleblower said: “Many inside the organisation believe that maintaining oil supplies at even 90m to 95m barrels a day would be impossible, but there are fears that panic could spread on the financial markets if the figures were brought down further. And the Americans fear the end of oil supremacy because it would threaten their power over access to oil resources.”

    These expressions of concern have stoked the fires of the “peak oil” community, which has been warning for some years that global politicians are failing to move fast enough to conserve oil and move to a low-carbon economy. The dissidents include experienced oil investors such as Matt Simmons of Simmons & Co, committed green entrepreneurs such as Jeremy Leggett of Solarcentury, as well as many more impartial MPs such as John Hemming and apparently independent academics.

    Kjell Aleklett, professor of physics at Uppsala University in Sweden, is one of the latter. His new report, “The Peak of the Oil Age”, claims crude production is more likely to be 75m barrels a day by 2030 than the “unrealistic” 105m projected by the IEA. This would clearly lead to massive price escalation in a world that expects to see demand grow to feed the expanding economies of China and India even while politicians try to grow wind, solar and other low-carbon energy sources.

    Aleklett, who runs the Global Energy Systems Group at Uppsala university, describes the IEA’s report as a “political document” developed for consuming countries with a vested interest in low prices and says he too has talked to sceptics inside the Paris organisation.

    The IEA has dismissed suggestions of internal ructions over the figures and has dismissed as “groundless” suggestions that the US was influencing the outcome of its forecast deliberations.

    Meanwhile it has defended its overall projections and pointed out that 200 “independent” experts are given sight of its findings, satisfying its demands for peer assessment. Birol says: “We are very proud of our analysis and independence. We have a lot of critics. It’s not possible to make everyone happy.”

    But the row rumbles on. John Hemming has just written to the IEA challenging a range of its figures while urging the UK government to take “peak oil” more seriously. The UK Industry Task Force on Peak Oil, which includes a variety of companies such as Virgin, Scottish & Southern Energy and Stagecoach, has also written to ministers calling for action.

    These critics are united in their fear that “economic dislocation” is likely once the world wakes up to the potential for shortages and the price of oil races back up, not only to last summer’s $147 a barrel, but more likely to $200. They point out that the world’s big recessions tend to have been generated at least in part by sudden escalations in energy costs.

    “The risks to UK society from peak oil are far greater than those that tend to occupy the government’s risk thinking, including terrorism,” says Will Whitehorn, a senior Virgin executive. “We fear this is because of over-estimation of reserves by the global oil industry, underinvestment in exploration and production, or a combination of the two.”

    The Department of Energy and Climate Change denies it is complacent, saying it accepts there is a “significant challenge” to attract the kinds of investment needed to keep the oil flowing.

    It points out how it has been working with governments individually and collectively to speed up crude production levels while joining the other G20 members in calling for more transparency from producing countries over key aspects of energy output and depletion.

    “We are training ministry officials in Nigeria and Iraq, for instance, to help them with licensing and other aspects of oil which will help them speed up the rate of production,” explains a DECC spokeswoman.

    She declines to comment directly on the IEA figures that caused the recent row but points out that Britain relied on a wide source of information and not just the agency’s figures.

    The UK Industry Task Force, which will produce a new report in January, is still upset that the Wicks review on energy security published this summer concluded “there is no crisis” – a position accepted by the government. Leggett, a member of the task force, argues that it was a similar lack of urgency that led to the implosion in the financial markets.

  • Senior Chinese climatologist calls for reform of IPCC

     

    Lü Xuedu, the deputy director general of the National Climate Centre and a Chinese delegate to the Copenhagen conference, said the use of flawed projections about the speed of melting of Himalayan glaciers and recent allegations that scientists blocked criticism proved there are problems with the way some IPCC documents are assessed and checked.

    Although he stressed support for the IPCC, of which China is an active participant, Lü said the young institution needed to strengthen its credibility.

    “The IPCC is still in a developing stage. It cannot be perfect or complete. It needs reform, especially after problems were exposed,” he said. “Some scientists take a political stance and wear coloured glasses, which means they do not look at issues in a comprehensive and objective way. The managing institute, authors and contributors of the assessment reports should be more objective in order to be more convincing.”

    However, he rejected calls for the resignation of the IPCC chair, Rajendra Pachauri, who has admitted it was wrong to include a prediction that Himalayan glaciers would melt by 2035.

    “I have full confidence that he can lead the IPCC,” said Lü. “The assessment reports involved so many materials and people that it is impossible for them to be perfect. As long as the IPCC officially admits problems, it is positive.”

    Chinese scientists have long been critical of the now-rejected claim that all Himalayan glaciers could melt by 2035, though there is wide acceptance that the glaciers in Urumqi in north-east China and elsewhere are shrinking, albeit at a slower pace.

    The National Climate Centre is a state body that has a strong influence on China’s position on the science of climate change.

    The government accepts that global warming is taking place, that China is affected and that, despite uncertainties about the degree of human responsibility, the country should take action to mitigate the impact as a responsible member of the international community.

    Lü suggested confidence in the IPCC could be improved if the organisation drew on a wider range of sources, invested in research institutions in developing nations and more-carefully cross-checked “grey literature” that is not peer-reviewed.

    “The majority of the IPCC’s references came from Europe and North America. Developing countries also want their voices to be heard in the drafting stage,” he said.

    Many Chinese scientists, all funded by the government, remain wary of global efforts to reduce carbon emissions and question whether even a 2C rise in the world’s temperature will be as calamitous as the IPCC has predicted.

    “The equivalent of climate sceptics in the west are the climate conspiracy theorists in China, who believe this is all part of a western plot against China,” said Yang Ailun of Greenpeace.

  • Boots, KFC, MsDonalds ignore rainforest destruction survey

    Boots, KFC, McDonalds ignore rainforest destruction survey

    Ecologist

    10th February, 2010

    Marks and Spencer and Sainsbury’s have been praised for disclosing their ‘forest footprint’ but experts say that consumers are still not aware of the impact of their daily diet

    A project has been lauched to inform consumers and investors about the link between corporate activity and deforestation. 

    Similar to the Carbon Disclosure Project, the Forest Footprint Disclosure Project (FFDP) calls on companies to disclose their ‘forest footprint’ and provide information about what they are doing to reduce it. 
        
    More than 200 of the world’s leading companies were surveyed on their involvement with ‘forest risk commodities’ such as timber, palm oil, beef, leather, soy and biofuels.

    A number of notable companies operating in the UK failed to respond to the survey including Boots, KFC and McDonalds.

    Boots said it was unfair for it to be associated with deforestation.

    ‘We use 0.1 per cent of the volume of palm oil that Sainsbury’s use. On the one hand we want to be open, honest and transparent but there has to be a sense of reality over volume and usage,’ said Richard Ellis, Head of Corporate Social Responsibility at Alliance Boots.

    Eating the rainforest

    Forest Footprint Disclosure (FFD) chair Andrew Mitchell said that consumers still have little awareness of the impact everyday products have on forests.
        
    ‘Consumers “eat” rainforests daily in beef burgers, bacon and beauty products, but without knowing it.
        
    ‘Because of growing demand for beef, soy, and palm oil, which are in much of what we consume, as well as timber and biofuels, rainforests are now worth more cut down than standing up,’ he said.
        
    Mitchell called on governments and companies to make urgent investments to avoid the costs of further deforestation. 

    ‘There will be no solution to climate change without a solution to deforestation. Our disclosure approach is intended to make companies sit up and take notice of their corporate responsibility to make downsizing their forest footprint a priority,’ he said.

    Hamburger certification?
        
    The report also highlighted that 80 per cent of land deforested in the Amazon between 1996 and 2006 was now being used for cattle pasture and recommended a certification system to enable buyers to make informed choices on animal products.
        
    However Simon Counsell, Executive Director of the Rainforest Foundation urged caution on the potential of voluntary certification schemes as a means of eliminating negative environmental impacts.
        
    ‘If the project’s real potential is to be fulfilled, we would really need to see governments, and especially the European Union, acting to regulate trade in these destructive products,’ he said.

    Useful Links
    The Forest Footprint Disclosure Project
    The Rainforest Foundation