Feb 082014
 

Palau's President Tommy Remengesau Jr. has declared the Pacific nation will become a marine sanctuary, where no commercial fishing will take place.

Palau beaches. Palau's president says ecotourism will be developed as an alternative to commercial fishing income. Photo: Jackson Henry, Reuters

Palau beaches. Palau's president says ecotourism will be developed as an alternative to commercial fishing income. Photo: Jackson Henry, Reuters

Mr Remengesau has told a UN oceans conference Palau's 200 nautical mile Exclusive Economic Zone will be a "100 per cent marine sanctuary", and commercial operations will be banned within the Pacific nation's territorial waters.

"We have no choice - the ocean is our way of life," he said.

"It's our livelihood, it's our culture, it's our economy - I always say the economy is our environment and the environment is our economy."

"You may ask why, why are you doing this? It makes every sense for our sustainability as a people, as an island nation, and as a community."

Palau currently has commercial fishing contracts with Japan, Taiwan and several private companies, which will be allowed to expire.

Mr Remengesau says locals and tourists will continue to be able to fish, but no commercial scale operations will take place.

"I may not be the best fisherman, but I am a fisherman," he said.

"I can tell you that in just my generation I've seen stocks of fish dwindle down, I've seen the sizes of fish taken become more smaller.

"This is something that is far more than the economical loss of revenues for companies or other countries - you're talking about a livelihood that's really going to be decimated if we don't take the responsible action."

The marine sanctuary follows the declaration of a shark sanctuary in Palau in 2009.

Shark sanctuaries have since been declared in several other countries, including the Maldives, Honduras, Marshall Islands and French Polynesia.

Mr Remengesau says a dead shark is worth several hundred dollars, but a live shark is worth $1.9 million in tourism during its life span.

He says his country will promote scuba diving, snorkelling and eco-tourism as an alternative income to commercial fishing.

"We're not just closing our waters and throwing away the key," he said.

"We're closing our waters because we will do our part of making sure that there's healthy stocks of fish in Palau that can migrate to other places, and that there are other options to grow the economy.

"These are important ways to make a living and at the same time preserve the pristine environment that we have been blessed with in Palau."

Enforcement of the commercial fishing ban is expected to be a challenge, as the country only has one patrol boat to cover its economic zone which is roughly the size of France.

Last year it trialled unmanned drones, and is also looking for other technology partners to help enforce the ban.

Sustainable Development Goal

Palau is also urging the United Nations to adopt a new Sustainable Development Goal to protect the world's oceans.

The Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) are a follow-up to the Millennium Development Goals, which pledged countries to reduce poverty and improve health and environmental protection by 2015.

Stuart Beck, Ambassador of the Republic of Palau for Oceans and Seas, says the proposal for a 'stand alone' goal has three parts.

"One: healthy oceans - let's clean up the plastic gyre, let stop dumping garbage," he said.

"Two: restoration of our fish stocks - we can actually achieve that in our lifetime if we're smart about it.

"Three: bring some equity to the current resources being taken from these oceans by others."

It doesn't matter where you live around the world; we are all connected somehow and are impacted by what we do to the oceans

Tommy Remengesau Jr, President of Palau

Mr Remengesau says the health of oceans affects countries in a variety of ways, from rising sea levels, to ocean acidification and unpredictable weather.

"It doesn't matter where you live around the world; we are all connected somehow and are impacted by what we do to the oceans and the health of the oceans and the seas.

"And so it is important that the United Nations in the next Millennium Development Goals, really put a stand alone policy on this."

Deputy Secretary-General with the UN, Jan Elliason, has paid tribute to the Pacific and other island countries for raising awareness of the issue.

"They have an acute sense of the dangers of climate change and the level of sea rise - becoming an existential threat for them," he said.

"They are a bit like the canaries in the coal mine, the canaries that warn us that now the oxygen is [running] out...they're the first ones to leave.

"We should listen to those states."

Feb 072014
 

ABC NewsOriginal story at ABC News

The chair of the Murray-Darling Basin Authority says cuts to river services are being considered due to funding cuts by state governments.
Craig Knowles at the Goolwa barrages on the Murray.  Services along the river facing cuts. Photo: ABC News

Craig Knowles at the Goolwa barrages on the Murray. Services along the river facing cuts. Photo: ABC News

In an interview with 730SA, Craig Knowles says a funding cut by New South Wales is "terribly disappointing" and he argues it will affect how the Authority manages joint assets along the Murray.

Mr Knowles says the Authority is drawing up a list of river services that could be reduced, while giving priority to issues of human safety, protection of property and dam safety.

Services such as salt interceptor schemes, native fish strategies and opening times for locks and weirs are facing cutbacks.

"There is an inevitability that things like wage packets, jobs in local towns, opportunities for leisure and recreation will be impacted," Mr Knowles said.

- The full interview with Craig Knowles, and a look at the state of Lake Albert, is on 730SA on ABC1 on Friday
Feb 072014
 

Original story by Michèle Jedlicka, The Inverell Times

Biodiversity and sustainability along the Macintyre River in Inverell will be helped along with a dose of funding.

Macintyre River, Inverell, NSW. Photo: Cgoodwin, Wikimedia Commons

Macintyre River, Inverell, NSW. Photo: Cgoodwin, Wikimedia Commons

Inverell Shire Council has secured a grant for $13,625 to eradicate weeds from the river’s banks. The project will focus on woody weeds along an 800 metre stretch between Clive Street and the Tingha Bridge.

Removing weeds will make room for native vegetation, and improve fish habitat by providing shade, cover, water temperature regulation and a food source for native fish.

The funding comes from the NSW Department of Primary Industries, out of $570,000 awarded to recreational angling clubs, community groups, landholders and local councils for 30 fish habitat projects.

Minister for Agriculture Katrina Hodgkinson said projects cover many popular coastal and inland fishing spots in NSW, with nearly $1.1 million committed as in-kind support from the successful applicants.

 “These grants are funded through the Recreational Fishing Trusts,” Ms Hodgkinson said.

“The program was highly competitive with 71 applications submitted and there was strong support by local recreational anglers for the applications.”

Weed control activities along the Macintyre River will be completed during 2014 and will include initial weed control and follow up spot spraying activities on any re-growth.

Inverell council general manager Paul Henry said the project is one of many identified when completing the council’s river plan. A river planner targeted 15 trouble spots.

Mr Henry said local community groups have expressed interest in addressing specific issues along the river.

“The Inverell Rotary Club put their hand up to look at the area near John Northey look-out/Kurrajong Park. They looked at repairing that area and planting out the areas with native plants to try to rejuvenate (it) and create a link all along the river for birds and animal habitat.”

He said the grant money will tackle invasive introduced weeds along the high bank level. Once cleared, replanting may begin.

Phil Sutton is the environment compliance co-ordinator for council and indicated the project has other benefits besides environmental restoration.

He said the project would help to increase public awareness about the weeds control and prevention.

“It’s an effort to provide a flow-on benefit to landholders and communities further down the river. Obviously if you don’t treat (weeds) now, they go further down the river.”

Contract sprayers will be engaged to treat the weeds and Phil said it will be a 12 month project with wildlife sustainability in mind.

“What the area will be treated with is a weed-control agent that is a bioactive control, which doesn't affect the riparian area; it doesn't affect the water or the frogs or anything like that.”

Feb 062014
 

The ConversationBy Cordelia Moore, University of Western Australia; Euan Harvey, Curtin University, and Hugh Possingham at The Conversation

How do we get the most out of our marine reserves? The government is in the process of reviewing Australia’s network of marine protected areas. The review focuses on zones that exclude recreational fishers, and whether those fishers can be allowed back in.
While we don’t know much about oceans off north west Australia, we know they’re important. Photo: Australian Institute of Marine Science

While we don’t know much about oceans off north west Australia, we know they’re important. Photo: Australian Institute of Marine Science

However, fishing isn’t the only threat to marine life: oil and gas developments also influence offshore waters. Separating marine protected areas and regions with oil and gas potential leads to an unrepresentative reserve system. But working with oil and gas companies could work out both for industry and our ocean.

Like oil and water

Striking the balance between biodiversity conservation and industry is never easy. It is particularly difficult in regions that support both important biodiversity values and industry assets such as oil and gas resources and important commercial and recreational fisheries.

While the current management review will focus on fishing, a very different challenge exists in Australia’s northwest marine region. Here, some of the world’s most pristine and biologically diverse marine ecosystems overlay internationally significant oil and gas reserves.

Australia’s gas production has almost doubled since the turn of the century and is expected to quadruple by 2035. In a time of transition, following a decade-long mining boom, the government is seeking to maximise access to the nation’s oil and gas resources. With the majority (92%) of Australia’s conventional gas resources located in Australia’s northwest, finding the right balance between biodiversity conservation and industry interests is difficult and potentially expensive.

In fact, disasters have happened. In 2009, this region experienced the worst offshore oil spill in Australia’s history. The blowout from PTTEP’s Montara wellhead, located 250km off the Kimberley coast, resulted in 10 weeks of continuous release of oil and gas into the Timor Sea.

In total, the oil spill was estimated to cover an area of 90,000 square kilometres. Ongoing aerial spraying with dispersants was the primary early response to the spill with tens of thousands of litres of chemical dispersants sprayed into Australian waters.

We learned two very important lessons from the spill. First, the threat of an oil spill was realised and one of our most pristine and ecologically diverse marine environments was put at risk of irreversible damage.

Second, it highlighted what we don’t know. We lack the ecological data for the region to be able to identify and manage the impacts of an oil spill.

The proposed strict no-take marine reserves for Australia’s northwest leave many ecological communities unprotected. Image: Cordelia Moore

The proposed strict no-take marine reserves for Australia’s northwest leave many ecological communities unprotected. Image: Cordelia Moore

Protecting hidden reefs and biodiversity hotspots

After the spill, scientists hurried to start filling the gaps in what we know. While we lacked pre-existing ecological data, there was little evidence of a substantial impact from the oil spill. To improve this process in the future we now have some baseline monitoring sites in place. In addition, we have a new regulator focused on the implementation of more stringent oil spill response plans and risk management procedures and individual companies have had to upgraded their response and management plans.

One important discovery was the rich coral reef communities of the submerged banks and shoals. These abrupt geological features pepper the continental shelf and shelf edge. However, as these underwater mounds plateau beneath the sea surface they have previously gone unnoticed, hidden beneath the waves.

Intensive post-spill surveys revealed the shoals to support fish diversity greater that that seen on similar features within the Great Barrier Reef. They are also positioned to act as important stepping stones for biological connectivity across Australia’s north west and may serve as an important refuge for species vulnerable to climate change.

However, the current national marine reserves system offers almost no protection for these areas (less than 2% fall within the no take marine reserves).

“World’s largest marine park network”

The previous government aimed to create the “world’s largest marine park network”. With the current network falling just shy of 30% of Australia’s territorial waters, they came very close.

Although, as Bob Pressey detailed in his article on Australia’s marine protected areas, size isn’t everything.

Last month I lead a workshop at the University of Western Australia to assess the marine park network to the north west of Australia (north of Broome). The workshop included universities, government and industry.

During the workshop we assessed just how representative the marine parks of this region actually are. With little data available on biodiversity, we used the proxy of undersea geomorphology.

What we found is that of 19 different ecological communities, only four are adequately represented, two are over-represented, seven are under-represented and six aren’t represented at all.

Because we don’t exactly know what’s under the sea, we use geomorphology as a proxy. Image: Cordelia Moore

Because we don’t exactly know what’s under the sea, we use geomorphology as a proxy. Image: Cordelia Moore

The most vulnerable section of our marine region is the continental shelf (less than 200m depth), where threats to biodiversity are concentrated. Despite this, the majority (75%) of the proposed no take areas focuses on the abyssal plain 3000-6000 metres below the surface.

Why? Protecting biodiversity to the north west of Australia comes with substantial opportunity costs to the oil and gas industry and commercial fishers. As a result, the proposed marine reserves of Australia’s north west have weighed heavily in favour of industry.

A way forward

With a reserve system already struggling to be representative, there are very real concerns associated with making any changes outside a robust conservation planning process. Currently the federal government proposes to maintain the outer boundaries of the marine parks network, while changing zoning within the reserves to allow recreational and commercial fishers access. But without closing alternative areas, this will only compromise our limited ability to manage threatening processes and conserve biodiversity.

Examining a small fraction of the problem will only ever provide a small fraction of the solution.

At the workshop in WA, we tried to come up with a better solution. We looked at a way to maximise representativeness, while minimising costs to user groups using an advanced systematic conservation planning approach.

Preliminary analyses demonstrated that entirely excluding whole regions prospective for oil and gas reserves makes a system of marine protected areas unrepresentative while including these regions makes a reserve system very expensive.

One cost-effective solution could be found for this region by bringing industry users into the management process and agreeing that prospective areas for oil and gas extraction are not incompatible with marine biodiversity conservation. Oil and gas developments often have stringent biodiversity protection targets and with people present on most sites all the time, enforcement of adjacent no take areas is potentially far cheaper.

The possibility for the oil and gas industry to be actively engaged in the protection of marine biodiversity may be a way of offering presently unrepresented marine ecosystems some level of protection too. In general the industry’s infrastructure footprint is quite small. Major oil spills from exploration and production activities world-wide are relatively rare with just one occurring on the west coast of Australia. While the risk is low, the consequences can be high. Therefore implementing multiple protected areas is one way of ‘hedging our bets’.

In a region highly valuable to industry the costs of biodiversity protection will be high if we continue to see oil and gas interests as incompatible with conservation. But leaving these unique ecosystems without management and protection may cost us even more in the long term.

Read more about marine parks here.

Hugh Possingham receives funding from The Australian Research Council, The National Environmental Research program and several NGOs. He is affiliated with The Wentworth Group, Trees For Life SA, BirdLife Australia and WWF Australia.

Cordelia Moore and Euan Harvey do not work for, consult to, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organisation that would benefit from this article. They also have no relevant affiliations.

This article was originally published at The Conversation.
Read the original article.

Feb 062014
 

By Graham Edgar, University of Tasmania, at The Conversation

Marine protected areas aren’t doing their job. Photo: Charlievdb/Flickr

Marine protected areas aren’t doing their job. Photo: Charlievdb/Flickr

Marine protected areas have been created across the globe to stem the loss of biodiversity in our oceans. But are they working? Now, thanks to a six-year survey involving over one hundred divers, we know that the global system of marine protected areas still has much to achieve.

Problems out of sight

The marine environment lies out of sight and is expensive to survey, so its true condition is very poorly known. What we do know is that multiple threats — most notably introduced pests, climate change, fishing and pollution — are pervasive.

We also know that conditions are deteriorating. Numbers of many Australian marine species have collapsed since European settlement. Some species haven’t been seen for decades, such as the smooth handfish, which was once sufficiently abundant to be collected by early French naturalists visiting Australia but hasn’t been seen anywhere for more than 200 years.

If this were a mammal, bird, reptile, frog or plant, it would be listed under Commonwealth and state threatened species acts as extinct. As a marine fish, it has not been considered for any list.

We also know that marine species that build habitat for other species are declining. Coral cover across the Great Barrier Reef has been reduced by about 25% between 1986 and 2004. Global seagrass and mangrove cover have declined by 30% over the past century, with losses accelerating. And oyster reefs have largely disappeared worldwide, as have giant kelp forest ecosystems on the Tasmanian east coast.

Fishery catch statistics also show major population declines in commercially important species such as scallops, rock lobsters, barracouta, trumpeter, abalone, warehou, gemfish and sharks.

These snapshots all consistently indicate major detrimental change in our oceans.

Surveying the threats

Twenty years ago, in a bid to understand the magnitude of this change, I and my Institute for Marine and Antarctic Studies colleague Neville Barrett began regularly surveying rocky reef communities in collaboration with management agencies across southern Australia. These surveys were focused inside and outside marine protected areas, to disentangle effects of fishing from broader environmental changes.

We found that each marine protected area was different. Recovery within protected areas depended on a variety of local factors, including protected area size and age, how much fishing had occurred prior to regulation, the type of regulations, and whether they were enforced.

To separate these individual factors properly required investigation of tens to hundreds of protected areas, many more than we could logistically cover with our limited scientific resources.

Coral reefs are the most diverse ecosystems in the ocean. Photo: Wilson Loo Kok Wee/Flickr

Coral reefs are the most diverse ecosystems in the ocean. Photo: Wilson Loo Kok Wee/Flickr

Enlisting citizen divers

This led to the idea of enlisting support from the recreational diving community, and our new study was born.

With pilot funding from the Commonwealth Environment Research Facilities program, and on-ground direction from colleague Rick Stuart-Smith, we sought help from experienced recreational divers across Australia who are passionate about marine conservation.

More than 100 divers agreed to donate their time, learning scientific underwater survey techniques, using their weekends and holidays to collect new data, and spending long hours afterwards identifying species and entering data onto computer spreadsheets.

To facilitate this program, an independent organisation called Reef Life Survey was established. It aimed to train and support member divers during field surveys, and to distribute information collected to improve knowledge and management of marine species. An incredible amount has been achieved over the past six years through the generous efforts of Reef Life Survey divers.

Most importantly, we have established a quantitative baseline describing the current state of inshore biodiversity around Australia. Numbers of more than 2500 species of fish, seaweeds and invertebrates (such as lobsters, abalone, sea urchins and corals) at more than 1500 sites have been documented.

This is the largest marine ecological baseline for any continent worldwide. It provides an invaluable reference that can be referred to through the future for tracking impacts of climate change, pollution, introduced species, and fishing.

The Reef Life Survey baseline has also now extended globally through collaboration with scientists in 18 countries, and with additional survey data collected by trained volunteer divers during their overseas holidays.

Clownfish and anemone. Photo: Paul from www.Castaways.com.au/Flickr

Clownfish and anemone. Photo: Paul from www.Castaways.com.au/Flickr

Parks on paper, not in the ocean

Still the question remains: how effective are marine protected areas at conserving marine life?

We recently analysed data from 40 countries to understand better the underlying factors that make marine protected areas effective as conservation tools, with results published in the journal Nature today.

We found no difference between fish communities present in most of 87 marine protected areas studied worldwide, when compared with communities in fished areas with similar environmental conditions.

Many protected areas thus seem to be “paper parks” — lines on the map that fail to achieve desired conservation outcomes.

However, some protected areas are extremely effective, with massive numbers of large fish and extremely high conservation value. These effective protected areas are typified by the same recurring features: no fishing, well enforced, more than 10 years old, relatively large in area, and isolated from fished areas by habitat boundaries (deep water or sand).

Protected areas with these characteristics, such as Middleton Reef off northeastern New South Wales, had on average twice as many species of large fish per transect, eight times more large fish, and 20 times more sharks than fished areas.

Getting marine parks right

Management agencies around the world clearly need to focus on creating more of these effective protected areas. At the same time they need to alter the design and management of the many existing protected areas that aren’t working. The few conservation gems are presently hidden amongst protected areas that are ineffective because of inadequate regulations or poor enforcement.

We also need to improve broad-scale environmental management more generally, considering how fast our oceans are deteriorating outside of protected areas.

Fishing is one of the last direct connections between humanity and the natural world. As a fisher who supports fishing, I see no incongruity in advocating that 20% of the marine environment be placed in effective no-take protected areas. Leaving 80% open to fishing hardly qualifies as threatening fishers’ interests.

Among other benefits, including acting as irreplaceable scientific reference areas, protected areas provide some insurance for future generations against ecosystem collapse.

I have little doubt that 50 years from now fishers will regret the slow pace of developing effective marine protected areas. They will also bemoan consequences of blanket opposition against any protected areas by some politicians and industry lobbyists, and an over-reliance of fisheries managers on computer models that attempt to maximise economic returns with little margin for error in an era of change when model variables increasingly fall outside known bounds.

Read more about making marine parks better here.

Graham Edgar has received funds from Commonwealth and State agencies for research activities associated with marine conservation. He fishes, and many years ago worked commercially as a deckhand for an abalone diver. His University of Tasmania job is part-time, and diving surveys for the global study described here were undertaken in his spare time as a volunteer for the Reef Life Survey Foundation. He is also a director of an environmental consulting company, Aquenal Pty Ltd.

This article was originally published at The Conversation.
Read the original article.

Feb 052014
 

News release from DAFF (the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry)

Queenslanders can now access the latest statistics on commercial and recreational fishing with the launch of the new QFish web portal by the Queensland Government.

Fisheries Queensland Manager Ross Quinn said the new web interface brought all types of fishing data together in one, easy-to-use resource.

"With more than 700,000 recreational fishers and 1500 licensed commercial fishing boats, Queensland is a state of fishing enthusiasts," Dr Quinn said.

"This portal provides open, transparent data to the community in response to their key interests.

"It allows users to access catch and effort information by fish species, years, specific areas or regions and fishing methods.

"The recreational catch data is drawn from statewide recreational fishing surveys, while the commercial fishing data is from daily commercial logbooks dating back to 1990.

"This is a new and improved resource, replacing the Coastal Habitat Resources Information System (CHRIS).

"QFish accesses commercial fishing information updated weekly, so provides more complete and current information than CHRIS did.

"Information accessed through QFish can be easily downloaded to a spreadsheet, and data on grids or fishing regions can be easily mapped.

"Once produced, the map can be printed or downloaded to your computer for later use.

"Access to current, region-specific data on fishing will enable users to become more familiar with trends in their area, whether for their personal enjoyment or business."

Visit QFish at http://qfish.daff.qld.gov.au

For further information on QFish and assistance with your data search, contact 13 25 23.

Follow Fisheries Queensland on Facebook and Twitter (@FisheriesQld).

Media contact: Sacha Kitson, 3087 8583

Feb 052014
 

News release from DAFF (the Department of Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry)

Recreational fishingFishers are reminded to keep a look out for illegal fishing activities and report them immediately to authorities.

Queensland Boating and Fisheries Patrol district officer Peter Dixon said officers had received a number of reports recently for suspected illegal fishing activities, but were limited in their ability to investigate as the activity had occurred many months prior.

“Public information on suspected illegal fishing is essential for us to ensure compliance with fishing rules and, in turn, maintain the sustainability of our fisheries,” Mr Dixon said.

“We need detailed and timely information to track illegal fishing activities.

“If sufficient detail is provided, an investigation may be undertaken. Less detailed information is retained for intelligence purposes.

“People who suspect illegal fishing activities shouldn’t engage with the illegal fisher as this could compromise an investigation and their personal safety. They should simply:

  • record the date, time and area of where the activity is occurring
  • record any vehicle registration numbers and their descriptions
  • record any boat registration numbers and their descriptions
  • give the details of the person or people involved if they are known
  • give an accurate description of the activity involved
  • ring their local QBFP office or the Fishwatch hotline to pass on this information.

“Photos or video of the activity occurring can greatly assist investigations, but should only be taken when it is safe to do so.

“We also need people to report suspect activities to us as soon as possible, as it can become difficult for us to investigate after a period of time has passed.”

Mr Dixon said all information is valuable, and members of the public were encouraged to report any suspected illegal fishing activity to the Fishwatch hotline on 1800 017 116, their local QBFP office or via the Fishwatch form at www.facebook.com/FisheriesQueensland.

“Information received via the Facebook form is processed during normal business hours. For immediate attention you should phone the hotline.

“Fishwatch is a 24-hour free hotline designed for people to report illegal fishing activities.

“Callers can remain anonymous, however if they leave contact details it allows us to make follow-up enquiries should we require further information and provide feedback on the outcome of the investigation.

“By working together, we can protect our valuable fish stocks for current and future generations.”

For more information on fishing rules in Queensland, visit www.fisheries.qld.gov.au or call 13 25 23.

Follow Fisheries Queensland on Facebook and Twitter (@FisheriesQld).

 

Media contact: Jodana Anglesey, 3087 8601

Feb 052014
 

The ConversationBy Tom Swann, Australian National University and Richard Denniss, Australian National University at The Conversation

If you haven’t heard about the growing campaign for fossil fuel divestment, and what it means for both your retirement funds and for the global economy, it’s time to pay attention - because now even the World Bank is on board.

World Bank President Jim Yong Kim warns investors not to ignore climate risks. Photo: EPA/Chris Kleponis

World Bank President Jim Yong Kim warns investors not to ignore climate risks. Photo: EPA/Chris Kleponis

At the recent World Economic Forum in Davos, World Bank President Jim Yong Kim called for stronger government action to:

divest and tax that which we don’t want, the carbon that threatens development gains over the last 20 years… Governments must put a price on pollution… through either taxes or market-based instruments.

Dr Kim also argued that taking climate change risks seriously is something all prudent investors - especially those in business - should be doing by now:

So-called ‘long-term investors’ must recognise their fiduciary responsibility to future pension holders who will be affected by decisions made today. Corporate leaders should not wait to act until market signals are right and national investment policies are in place.

Coal in the firing line

The World Bank has made a start in practising what it preaches.

Last year the World Bank announced it would not fund any new coal power plants “except in exceptional circumstances”. However, the World Bank is still drawing strong criticism for its ongoing support for a coal plant in India.

Similar restrictions on new coal generation investments have now been announced by US, Scandinavian, European and UK development banks.

On Friday last week, 17 US philanthropic groups with combined assets of about US$1.8 billion promised to sell their investments in fossil fuel companies and instead put their money into clean-energy technology.

“The magnitude of the climate crisis requires that we no longer conduct business as usual,” the Wallace Global Fund’s executive director Ellen Dorsey told reporters. “If we own fossil fuels, we own climate change.”

That US announcement came just days after Norway’s oil-funded sovereign wealth fund - which owns around 1% of the world’s stocks - revealed that it has already halved its investments in coal.

The fund’s chief executive Yngve Slyngstad told a parliamentary hearing on Tuesday last week that, by the end of 2013, coal companies represented just 0.08% or US$405.57 million of the fund’s $US817 billion portfolio.

An opposition-led majority of Norway’s parliament are now pushing to ban the fund from coal completely - though the government does not back the proposal.

The London-based World Coal Association has been concerned enough about the coal divestment proposal to put out media releases criticising the move and urging the Norwegian government to talk to industry.

Calculating climate risk

Speaking at Davos, Dr Kim also highlighted the need for a new line of policy reform: forcing companies and financial institutions to disclose their climate risk, including the emissions linked to their businesses, and their exposure to climate-related impacts.

Currently there is a wide range of different carbon risk frameworks, which are mostly voluntary and sometimes incompatible.

The United Nations' Environment Programme’s Finance Initiative is developing an emissions guidance for investors. However, this work has been relatively marginal in the bigger picture of mainstream economic and climate policy, hardly registering as an issue at most recent UN climate talks.

Instead, the main pressure on investors to reduce the world’s reliance on high-emissions fossil fuels is coming from the community.

Community pressure

Fossil fuel divestment campaigners are now directly lobbying universities, religious groups, local governments and foundations to show moral leadership on climate change by selling all stock in coal, gas and oil producers. There are now hundreds of these local campaigns across the US, Australia, New Zealand and Europe, which have attracted a growing list of commitments from universities, churches and even cities.

Late last year, an Oxford University study compared the fossil fuel divestment campaign with past campaigns against investments in tobacco, apartheid in South Africa, armaments, gambling and pornography. It concluded that the new fossil fuel campaign “has achieved a lot in the relatively short time”.

Coal was found to be the fossil fuel most at risk from the campaign, with some investors like US$74 billion Scandinavian asset manager Storebrand excluding more coal companies from its stocks. The study found that while the divestment push was likely to have only a small impact on fossil fuel companies' share prices, the reputational damage could prove far more costly:

The outcome of the stigmatisation process, which the fossil fuel divestment campaign has now triggered, poses the most far-reaching threat to fossil fuel companies and the vast energy value chain.

Thinking a generation ahead

Even if not all investors and retirement funds choose to act on moral terms, surely they can respond to financial risk.

One major difficulty is aligning the long-term investment interests of asset owners - the funds, and ultimately those investing in the funds - with short-term incentives, in particular of their fund managers.

A 2012 World Economic Forum report suggests a range of measures that would help in the case of climate and other long-term policy goals that require redirection of large amounts of capital.

For example, tax incentives promoting long-term share ownership and new governance arrangements could favour longer term decision horizons. While work continues on disclosure frameworks, much greater work is needed on incentives extending the investment horizons of public funds.

But there are at least growing signs of change. As World Bank President Jim Yong Kim said at Davos:

It’s simple self-interest. Every company, investor, and bank that screens new and existing investments for climate risk is simply being pragmatic.

Tom Swann is a student in the Master of Climate Change program at ANU, spokesperson for the Fossil Free ANU campaign and research assistant at the Australia Institute.

Richard Denniss is the Executive Director of The Australia Institute, a Canberra based think tank.

This article was originally published on The Conversation.
Read the original article.

Feb 042014
 

Original story by Denise Carter and Kimberley Vlasic, The Cairns Post

ENVIRONMENTAL Defenders Office NQ set to launch push to give the Great Barrier Reef its own legal identity.

The Environmental Defenders' Office's Fergus Power wants to give the Great Barrier Reef its own legal entity. Photo: Tom Lee

The Environmental Defenders' Office's Fergus Power wants to give the Great Barrier Reef its own legal entity. Photo: Tom Lee

The Environmental Defenders Office NQ in Cairns is launching a campaign on February 20 to give a legal identity to the Great Barrier Reef so it can be defended in court.

It follows the news Brisbane-based EDO Queensland is taking legal action on behalf of the North Queensland Conservation Council with the support of protest group GetUp Australia to the administrative appeals tribunal.

It is looking to overturn the decision to dump three million cubic metres of dredge spoil inside the Great Barrier Reef World Heritage Area.

"It is time," principal solicitor of EDO NQ Fergus Power said, citing the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority's permit grant on Friday for North Queensland Bulk Ports Corporation to dredge the harbour at Abbot Point near Bowen.

He fears the move increases the potential of UNESCO putting the Reef on its "endangered" list or taking it off its World Heritage list in June.

He is also concerned about perceived conflicts of interest within GBRMPA.

"Since the dumping decision, we have had overwhelming feedback from people that the Reef should have some capacity to speak for itself," Mr Power said.

He said this approach had not yet been used in Australia but there was a precedent in New Zealand where the government gave the Whanganui River a legal identity in August 2012, so it would be treated as a "person", with a legal standing.

"There are many ways that the legal personality for the Great Barrier Reef can be approached: trustees could be appointed to look after the natural ecosystem and act on behalf of the entity," Mr Power said.

"They would be respected groups (or people) who are devoted to the protection of the natural environment, or another simple way is for all people to have standing to protect the interest of the Reef.

"The Great Barrier Reef is beyond national parties, it should be held in trust for all the people of the world.

"We already grant rights to dead objects, and the Reef is a living thing."

The launch date of the campaign by EDO NQ a non-profit, non-government community legal centre is the United Nations World Day of Social Justice.

Marine programs co-ordinator of the Cairns and Far North Environment Centre Josh Coates said he supported the move.

"I think personifying the Reef is a good idea," said Mr Coates, who is also a marine biologist.

He said there was also a high level of community concern about a proposal to dredge more than five million cubic metres of mud to expand the shipping channel in Trinity Inlet.

The Association of Marine Park Tourism Operators could also appeal the Abbot Point decision on the grounds GBRMPA has failed to fulfil its obligations to conserve and protect the Reef.

"It has to go to the board, but I don't think we can afford to walk away from this," association executive officer Col McKenzie said.

"If the leadership of the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority isn't prepared to enforce their act, it's time to replace that leadership."

Mr McKenzie said a move by UNESCO to list the reef as "World Heritage in Danger" would impact on tourist numbers and tourism operators in the Whitsundays were already experiencing a downturn due to poor visibility caused by suspended matter in the water.

Feb 042014
 

Original story at Sunshine Coast Daily

A SPRINGWOOD man has been fined $10,000 in the Caboolture Magistrates Court after being found guilty of damaging protected marine plants to improve the view at his  Pumicestone Passage property.
Canoeing on Pumicestone Passage.

Canoeing on Pumicestone Passage.

Queensland Boating and Fisheries Patrol (QBFP) officer Vaughan Heath said the fine reflects the seriousness of the offence.

"Cutting down or destroying marine plants on Queensland shores is illegal and incredibly destructive to Queensland's fisheries resources," Mr Heath said.

"The Fisheries Act 1994 protects all marine plants in Queensland including mangroves, seagrass, salt couch, and in specific circumstances Melaleuca and Hibiscus species, regardless of whether marine plants are on private, leasehold or public lands, or alive or dead.

"It is illegal to:

• hedge, trim, lop or spray marine plants with herbicide
• remove marine plants for river views or other aesthetic reasons
• remove mangroves or salt couch from a beach or foreshore
• run machinery over marine plants
• fill tidal lands
• dump garden waste (e.g. grass clippings and pruning) onto tidal areas."

Mr Heath said the future sustainability of Queensland's recreational, commercial and indigenous fisheries was at stake if fish habitats were not protected.

"Even hedging can change the productivity of the mangroves and reduce the number of animals that live beneath the canopy due to excessive shading.

"We hope this prosecution will make people think twice about damaging protected habitat areas.

"Damaging marine plants can carry a maximum penalty of $330,000."

Residents are encouraged to help protect marine plants and report any damage to the 24 hour, toll-free Fishwatch hotline 1800 017 116.

For more information on marine plant protection, visit www.fisheries.qld.gov.au or call 13 25 23.