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Boston Globe: Environmental havoc looms for Bhutan



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Boston Globe: Environmental havoc looms for Bhutan

Melting glaciers threaten valley in Himalayas


Email|Print|Single Page| Text size – + By Henry Chu

Los Angeles Times / April 28, 2008

PUNAKHA, Bhutan - High in the Himalayas, above this peaceful valley where farmers till a patchwork of emerald-green fields, an icy lake fed by melting glaciers waits to become a "tsunami from the sky."

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The lake is swollen dangerously past normal levels, thanks to the global warming that is causing the glaciers to retreat at record speed. But no one knows when the tipping point will come and the lake can take no more, bursting its banks and sending torrents of water crashing into the valley below.

Such floods from above have hit Punakha before, most recently in 1994, a calamity that killed about two dozen people and wiped out livelihoods and homes without warning. But scientists say a new flood could unleash more than twice as much water and be far more catastrophic.

Unfortunately, Punakha's residents are not alone in this picturesque Buddhist kingdom in having the threat of death and destruction hanging over their heads like an environmental sword of Damocles. Because of Earth's rising temperatures, at least 25 glacial lakes in Bhutan are at risk of overflowing and dumping their contents into the narrow valleys where much of the country's population lives.

Like many poor countries, isolated Bhutan is paying for the environmental damage wrought by the developed world and the expanding economies of nations such as China and India.

But the added, perhaps more bitter, irony here is that Bhutan probably has done more to safeguard its environment than almost any other country.

A land of breathtaking vistas, little pollution, and great biodiversity, Bhutan regards conservation as one of its most important public-policy goals - an anchor of "gross national happiness," the quirky measure of development concocted by the former king. Sustainable development is the official mantra. By law, the country's forest cover, including blue pine, cypress, spruce, and hemlock, must never drop below 60 percent. Snow leopards, Himalayan black bears, barking deer, and red pandas roam unmolested in the national parks and wildlife reserves that account for one-quarter of Bhutan's territory.

A sanctuary in the east is famous as the only one in the world set aside for the yeti - or "migoi," the mythical Abominable Snowman.

"This country is committed to being conducive to environmental sustainability and not to be harmful to the world, but the impact of climate change is coming anyway," said Doley Tshering of the United Nations Development Program office in Thimphu, the capital.

Some shifting weather patterns already are being felt.

"The winters are not so cold. The hot season is arriving much earlier," Tshering said. But possibly the most dramatic effect of global warming on Bhutan can be seen in its glaciers - or, perhaps more accurately, not seen.

On satellite images taken in 2000 and 2001, some of the smaller ice sheets along Bhutan's 200-mile stretch of the Himalayas no longer could be found, according to a report last year by the International Center for Integrated Mountain Development and the UN Environment Program.

Researchers estimate that Bhutan's glaciers are retreating by as much as 100 feet annually. The loss has grave consequences for the country's long-term development, because Bhutan relies heavily on selling hydroelectric power, which accounts for about one-third of national revenue.



© Copyright 2008 Globe Newspaper Company.
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Manawatu Standard: Plastic fantastic for fair trade

Feilding Herald | Tuesday, 29 April 2008
A sculpture, made out of more than 2600 plastic supermarket bags, is on display at Feilding's Trade Aid store.
The work of local artist Rachel Dore, the plastic bags were collected from friends, Feilding Trade Aid volunteers and staff at the Feilding Herald.
"So I am not the only one guilty of forgetting to take my re-useable shopping bag out of the car at the supermarket," said Dore.
The sculpture, titled Kyrie, is part of Trade Aid's nationwide Fair Trade Fortnight, May 3 to 16.
Each Trade Aid store in New Zealand is represented by one local artist, who converts junk into a piece of art. Organisers specify materials are to be locally available and abundant, creating a low-impact environmentally friendly item.
The figure was built up from a central core of a cardboard tube, and the plastic-bag pieces were bulked and layered and laminated with a hot iron. The front of the torso, and the swirling band around the figure have a wire- netting foundation layer, using old chicken-wire scraps. The head, arms and detailing were made out of carefully manipulated plastic bags.
Dore said she researched the effects of heat on the plastic bags, with advice from a Manawatu plastic firm.
"I needed to know I was not releasing toxins during the process. Apparently, the effect of ironing the plastic bags simply rearranges the polymer molecules. It only becomes toxic and unsafe when people burn it."
Dore said people could interpret the figure as they liked.
"I wanted the figure to seem to be singing, or calling - a sort of waiata or Kyrie, caught in the world that accepts poisons and pollutants like plastics as a necessary component of everyday commerce," she said.
Ali Parr, Feilding's Trade Aid store manager said the artwork was very different from anything the Trade Aid staff imagined.
"When Rachel asked us all to bring in our plastic bags we thought the sculpture would be something all floppy, or covered with plastic bows and streamers. The result is absolutely fantastic. We are very impressed," Mrs Parr said.
Artworks from the country's 29 Trade Aid stores will be exhibited at the Wellington Town Hall as part of World Environment Day celebrations (June 3).
The theme this year is Environmental Justice.
New Zealand was chosen to host the United Nations Environment Programme 2008, and Wellington is the host city for World Environment Day.
All the artworks will be auctioned on the evening of the Ministry for the Environment's Green Ribbon Awards.
Half the proceeds will be given to the artists based on the price received for their work, and half the money raised will be donated to Enviroschools.

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Other Environment News

AFP: US secretary concedes biofuels may spur food price rises

Mon Apr 28, 12:35 PM ET

WASHINGTON (AFP) - Setting aside farmland to produce biofuels like ethanol may be partly to blame for driving up world food prices, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said Monday.

been apparently some effect, unintended consequence from the alternative fuels effort," Rice told a meeting in Washington when asked for the US government's view on skyrocketing food prices.

"Although we believe that while biofuels continue to be an extremely important piece of the alternative energy picture, obviously we want to make sure that it is not having an adverse affect," she said.

"We think that it is not a large part of the problem, but it in fact may be a part of the problem, the ethanol debate," Rice told a gathering of the Peace Corps.

She said other factors fueling high prices are problems of distributing food in conflict areas like Sudan as well as export caps imposed by countries like China which are trying to meet rising demand from more affluent citizens.

Biofuels are touted as a way to limit and reduce greenhouse gas emissions, held responsible for global warming, but since they are grown on land that would otherwise be used for food production, they have been increasingly blamed for soaring food prices.

Outgoing Italian Prime Minister Romano Prodi told a conference in Rome last week that agricultural prices were not only being driven by rising demand but also by increased cultivation of biofuels, "creating strong tensions in a number of countries."



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