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February, 2008:

Toll Roads Key To Cleaner Air

Environment news.gov.hk – 15th Feb 2008

Toll roads should be adopted in congested areas as soon as possible while the use of low sulphur diesel should be made mandatory for certain marine transport, catering, construction and port industries to clean the air, according to a Council for Sustainable Development report.

The report on the better air quality engagement process, tabled to the Government today, recommended that a colour-coded system be adopted to denote “high air pollution” days. On “red alert” days, activities that generate air pollutants such as driving of private vehicles and use of non-essential electrical and diesel equipment in certain zones should be discouraged.

It suggested cleaner fuel options like liquefied petroleum gas for light goods and passenger vehicles should be explored, while more pedestrianised areas and closed roads in congested locations should be built. During certain hours of the day, the number of unused or half-used bus routes should be cut.

Incentives for the electricity companies to work with consumer groups and supply less environmentally damaging power with requisite rewards should also be put in place.

Council chairman Edgar Cheng said addressing air-quality issues requires a comprehensive and integrated approach.

Holistic approach

“The council urges the Government to tackle the air-pollution problem in a holistic and co-ordinated manner and come up with a comprehensive plan with timetable and resource allocation on how to effectively implement all necessary measures to tackle the air-pollution problem.

“The 80,000 and more public responses that the council received during the better air quality engagement process clearly show that the community is concerned about the current state of air quality, and that they want to see quick and determined actions to tackle the problem,” he added.

The council also submitted a report analysing the public views prepared by the independent reporting agency Hong Kong University Social Sciences Research Centre.

Both reports are available here. The Environment Bureau will carefully consider the recommendations, especially regarding the practicality of these recommendations.

Global Warming Blamed For Unusual Cold Spell

Nishika Patel

Thursday, February 14, 2008 – The Standard

As Hong Kong shivers through its second-longest cold spell since 1885, scientists point to global warming to explain the abnormal cold weather phenomenon worldwide. Unusually cold weather is gripping a number of countries, including China and Canada.

“We are seeing extremely unusual weather across the world,” said polar researcher Rebecca Lee Lok-sze. “This is due to human activities and our style of living. Carbon dioxide emissions are heavy, which is changing the weather rapidly. We could see colder winters and hotter summers in the future in Hong Kong.”

Greenpeace echoed the view, saying mainland scientists had also concluded that the extreme cold weather in China was triggered by climate change. “This does not only cause an increase in global warming but also causes extreme weather patterns,” said campaigner Edward Chan.

Hong Kong yesterday recorded its second- longest cold spell – 21 days. The longest cold period – when temperatures fall below 12 degrees Celsius – lasted 27 days in 1968. This record is expected to remain intact as the thermometer is forecast to register a low of 13 degrees by Sunday.

Hong Kong has also experienced more than 456 hours of cold weather this winter – more than double the 205-hour record in January 2004.

Some experts have said the cold weather in China and Canada may be linked to La Nina, a sea-surface cooling pattern in the east Pacific, which leads to a warmer sea surface in the west Pacific near China and Asia.

” La Nina is causing warm moist air to move to the south of China,” said Professor Yan Yuk- yee, who specializes in climatology at Hong Kong Baptist University. “When this meets the cold air of the monsoon, it causes freezing conditions.”

The cold spell has led to higher admissions to public hospitals. In most wards, occupancy is already full, the Hospital Authority said. Contingency measures including strengthening of the manpower in accident and emergency departments and medical wards are being implemented to relieve the pressure, its spokesman

Swire Spells Out New Green Policy

Patsy Moy – The Standard

Thursday, February 14, 2008

One of the city’s biggest landlords is calling on its tenants to save energy and protect the environment. Under a set of guidelines to be issued soon, Swire Properties will ask its office and shopping mall tenants to install sensors to control the use of lighting and electrical appliances.

Other suggestions include using energy-efficient office equipment and informing management of the times they do not need ventilation for their stores or offices such as after office hours. Swire technical services head Cary Chan Wing-hong said the new guidelines will spell out the company’s green policy in detail.

Under the last guidelines issued in 2000, tenants were told to abandon furniture and interior designs that contained volatile organic compounds as these can evaporate into the air and contribute to the formation of ozone.

Tenants were also encouraged to use wood that came from certified sustainable forests.

In addition, Swire provided light bulbs that were energy efficient but agreed it was up to the tenants whether or not to use them.

“As a landlord, we do not have the power to make our measures compulsory. Even so, we made and will continue to make efforts to raise the green awareness of our tenants and the community,” Chan said.

Sun Hung Kai Properties issued a green menu to tenants of its 50 shopping malls and 60 office and industrial buildings a couple of years ago, urging the use of more biodegradable compounds, according to Irene Wai Hon Shuk-ching, general manager of Kai Shing, a building management arm of Sun Hung Kai.

Swire said most tenants were happy to adopt the proposed measures and did not mind paying a bit more for renovation and energy-saving office equipment. “They know their investment will pay dividends in the long term,” Chan said.

Last month Swire and several other property developers were “named and shamed” by a concern group for failing to adopt energy-efficiency measures as part of a voluntary government scheme.

The electricity used by Hong Kong buildings constitutes about 90 percent of the city’s power consumption.

Chan said the accusations hurled against them were unfair as tenants needed power for lighting and air- conditioning to keep their businesses running. He said that unlike many surrounding buildings that are lit up to catch public attention, Swire has minimized the use of decorative lighting outside its buildings.

Chan said Swire has received excellent ratings under the Hong Kong Building Environmental Assessment Method.

Air Quality Info To Be Broadcast During Run

Timothy Chui – The Standard

Wednesday, February 13, 2008

Major road arteries on Hong Kong Island, West Kowloon and parts of the western New Territories will be closed for up to 10 hours on Sunday for the Standard Chartered Marathon which, with its ancillary races, has attracted close to 50,000 participants.
Following concerns about poor air quality in past years, the latest air pollution index will be broadcast regularly from 4.30am onward through public address systems and sign boards, the organizers said yesterday.

Eight ambulances, 420 medical personnel and 3,000 police officers and race helpers will also be on standby to render assistance, along with 26 first aid stations manned by the Auxiliary Medical Service.

With Hong Kong still in the grip of a cold spell which has already lasted 20 days, organizing committee chairman William Ko Wai-lam advised runners to observe proper warm-up techniques and dress appropriately.

Jackets traditionally reserved as souvenirs for runners will be handed out before the races in the event of rain, he added.

The New Territories and Kowloon routes for the full and half marathons remain the same as last year though both events will finish at Victoria Park instead of the convention center.

The popular 10-kilometer run, however, has been switched to the Island Eastern Corridor. Road closures along the marathon route will begin at 2am.

The major routes affected will be the Island East Corridor, the southbound lanes of the Western Harbour Crossing, West Kowloon Highway, Tsing Kwai Highway and Ting Kau Bridge.

Other closures include the eastbound lanes of the Tsing Ma Bridge, Cheung Tsing Tunnel and Connaught Road West, Rumsey Street and Harcourt Road flyovers.

The Transport Department’s senior transport officer for Wan Chai, Keke Leung Cheong-kit, said road closures for the 10km race will be lifted by 10am.

He said 155 bus routes and 27 public light bus routes will be affected.

Endless Talking Does Not Curb Pollution

SCMP

I found the statement by the assistant director of the Environmental Protection Department (EPD), Benny Y.K. Wong – that the government welcomes and takes seriously the community’s views on how to tackle the air pollution problem – quite depressing (“All views on air quality welcome”, February 5).

So the EPD needs our help? I thought they were the experts. Shouldn’t the people responsible for clearing our skies already know what to do? I guess not.

Mr Wong, here are some suggestions. I am only a teacher, not an environmental expert, but these ideas seem easy to understand. We should implement an idling-engine ban, something discussed since 2000, and introduce road pricing – also discussed for years.

All vehicles that do not meet the most recent environmental standards should be removed within six months. London imposes a daily fine of more than HK$3,000 on polluting trucks. This is action, not consultation.

Make catalytic converters mandatory immediately on all vehicles that do not meet current standards.

Our two power companies should be required to install the most advanced technology that is available to reduce emissions.

Finally, we should use the new World Health Organisation scale for assessing pollution, not the 1987 scale now in use. This is the easiest one to do immediately, but is currently in the consultation process.

These ideas are not new. They have been “discussed”, some for many years, but no action has been taken. So, Mr Wong, can you please tell me what good it does to make suggestions when no action is ever taken?

It is sad that the ones who could make a difference just do not seem to care enough. Mr Wong, the people cannot make any of these changes. We need action, not endless consultations, which it seems is the only thing this current administration is good at.

Terry Scott, Sha Tin

End Of The Pearl River Delta Industrial Miracle

End of the Pearl River industrial “miracle”

Asianews.it – 02/11/2008

This part of Guangdong was the true engine of the Chinese economic miracle. But now there is a shortage of labour, which is being lured away by better salaries in other regions, and production costs are rising. The region is seeking to encourage development of cutting edge services and industries.

Beijing (AsiaNews/Agencies) – The factories of the Pearl River Delta (Guangdong) are closing. For decades, they were the true engine of Chinese industrial production, and the main source of the entire country’s economic boom. The rise in the cost of labour and raw materials, greater pollution controls, the appreciation of the yuan, the rise in taxes, and the slowdown in the United States (the largest market for Chinese goods) are narrowing profit margins, and factories are increasingly locating their production toward the centre of the country, where manual labour is still cheap.

There has been a shortage of manual labour for some time, because workers have been migrating to other regions for better pay, or in order to be closer to home. It is feared that many of them will not return after the new year holiday, in part because of the great hardships that they suffered at the train station of Guangzhou, because of the snow, before they were able to depart. Labour costs have risen with the law in effect as of January 1, which provides for “basic” rights neglected until now, like medical insurance and holidays.

Eddie Lam Kwong-tak, director of Onlen Fairyland, which has 22 shoe factories and employs 40,000 workers, tells the South China Morning Post that the new law means that each pair of shoes will cost 10 yuan more to make. He says the effect of the law “will be like a tsunami”. It is a serious challenge to Chinese industry, which is accustomed to invading markets thanks to the low price of its products, and the artificially low exchange rate of the yuan .

Now Guangdong hopes to transform itself from an industrial region, based on tens of millions of poorly paid migrants, to an economy based on cutting edge, non-polluting services and industries. The new policy, in fact, punishes in the first place the industries that produce the most pollution and require a great deal of manual labor, like textiles, shoes, leather goods, and clothing. Many manufacturers are “migrating” to Hunan, Guizhou, and Jiangxi. This situation has been worsened by the recent snow emergency, which, blocking transportation and supplies and reducing the availability of electricity, forced the closure of factories that require a lot of raw materials and electricity, like cement and metal producers. The snow emergency will now delay these “transfers”, as some cities, like Chenzhou in Hunan, have remained for weeks with the roads blocked and with no electricity, and with the restoration of the electricity grids still weeks away.

Simon Shi Kai-biu, president of the Hong Kong Small and Medium Business Association, says that “About 30 [companies] have sold properties recently to Hong Kong developers and hundreds are in talks to sell. They need cash to move their operations elsewhere, or they wish to cash in on the bricks-and-mortar value before going out of business entirely”. “I won’t be surprised”, he adds, “to see 10,000 factories in Guangdong fold around the lunar new year”.

Many others will have to use petrol-powered generators as long as the electricity shortage continues, which will also raise costs.

Will Air Pollution Bills Be Top Priority?

Lawmakers Face Daunting Burden Of Bills To Pass 

Backlog worries committee chief

Jimmy Cheung – Feb 11, 2008

The Legislative Council has passed only five bills since October, leaving a huge backlog to clear when lawmakers resume work after the Lunar New Year break.

The slow progress has raised concerns that legislative proposals yet to be submitted may have to be postponed. Legco’s four-year term ends in July. Unfinished bills will lapse and have to go through the legislative process again when the new term begins in September.

In July 2004, lawmakers rushed through 14 outstanding bills, completing the work in seven working days during the last two weeks of sittings. Ten other bills could not be finished and had to be dropped eventually.

The chairwoman of the Legco House Committee, Miriam Lau Kin-yee, acknowledged that the slow progress in scrutinising bills had been causing concern since October.

“We can only try our best to finish as many as we can. For bills that are not facing a deadline, we just can’t help it [if they are omitted],” she said.

The five bills that lawmakers have enacted since October were all inherited from the previous session, according to Legco records.

The government scheduled 15 new bills for the existing session. So far, only eight have been tabled and none have been completed.

Legislators are also grappling with a further eight bills that were held over from before.

The government plans to table five more bills this month, including the legislative framework for the West Kowloon Cultural District Authority. But since the house rules allow a maximum of only 15 bills committees to operate at the same time, the rest may have to wait for a time slot to get scrutiny by lawmakers.

In one high-profile example, it is still uncertain whether the controversial move to legislate a central slaughtering operation for poultry will be tabled before July, as planned.

Ms Lau said she had repeatedly raised concerns about the progress of bills with Chief Secretary Henry Tang Ying-yen during their weekly meetings.

“Actually, there have been concerns since last October, and we have been chasing the government to submit bills as early as possible,” she said.

“I have already told the government we won’t be able to finish if the bill is very complicated. We can only say we will try our best and see how it goes. I cannot guarantee whether or not we will make it.”

When asked if lawmakers were to blame for the slow progress, she replied: “I don’t think it’s the responsibility of [House Committee] members. It’s the duty of lawmakers to carefully scrutinise the bills tabled to us. So all I can say is they should table the bills to us as soon as possible.”

She said it was difficult to predict if any bills would be postponed to the next Legco term.

An administration spokesman would not say if any bills risked being postponed. He said lawmakers accepted the goal of trying to pass all pending bills this session.

“We appreciate the efforts in scrutinising the bills already introduced,” he said. “The administration will continue to work closely with the bills committees and provide necessary assistance [in] their scrutiny.

“We hope the bills now before the bills committees and the bills to be introduced will all be passed this session. We believe that Legco members also share this target. We will work closely with them.”

Legislative logjam

Bills to be introduced this month

  1. Road Traffic Legislation (Amendment) Bill 2008
  2. Fixed Penalty (Smoking Offences) Bill
  3. Air Pollution Control (Amendment) Bill 2008
  4. West Kowloon Cultural District Authority Bill
  5. Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill 2008

Bills in current legislative programme yet to be introduced

  1. Nuclear Material (Liability for Carriage) (Amendment) Bill
  2. Public Health and Municipal Services (Amendment) Bill –

Bills tabled since October and not yet finished

  1. Buildings (Amendment) Bill 2007
  2. Legislative Council (Amendment) Bill 2007
  3. Prevention and Control of Disease Bill
  4. Trade Descriptions (Amendment) Bill 2007
  5. Product Eco-responsibility Bill
  6. Mandatory Provident Fund Schemes (Amendment) No 2 Bill 2007
  7. Munsang College and Heep Yunn School (Change of Corporate Names and General Amendments) Bill 2008
  8. Pneumoconiosis (Compensation) (Amendment) Bill 2008

Bills brought from previous sessions and not yet finished

  1. Race Discrimination Bill
  2. Mainland Judgments (Reciprocal Enforcement) Bill
  3. Energy Efficiency (Labelling of Products) Bill
  4. Statute Law (Miscellaneous Provisions) Bill 2007
  5. The English Schools Foundation (Amendment) Bill 2007
  6. Domestic Violence (Amendment) Bill 2007
  7. Prevention of Bribery (Amendment) Bill 2007
  8. Independent Police Complaints Council Bill

Bills passed since October

  1. Attachment of Income Order (Application to the Government and Miscellaneous Amendments) Bill 2007
  2. Patents (Amendment) Bill 2007
  3. Mandatory Provident Fund Schemes (Amendment) Bill 2007
  4. Civil Justice (Miscellaneous Amendments) Bill 2007
  5. The Chinese University of Hong Kong (Declaration of C. W. Chu College, Wu Yee Sun College and Lee Woo Sing College as constituent colleges) Bill

Bills to be enacted this month

  1. Domicile Bill

Source: Administration Wing, Chief Secretary for Administration’s Office & Legislative Council website

Biofuels Deemed a Greenhouse Threat

New York Times By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL

Almost all biofuels used today cause more greenhouse gas emissions than conventional fuels if the full emissions costs of producing these “green” fuels are taken into account, two studies being published Thursday have concluded.

The benefits of biofuels have come under increasing attack in recent months, as scientists took a closer look at the global environmental cost of their production. These latest studies, published in the prestigious journal Science, are likely to add to the controversy.

These studies for the first time take a detailed, comprehensive look at the emissions effects of the huge amount of natural land that is being converted to cropland globally to support biofuels development.

The destruction of natural ecosystems — whether rain forest in the tropics or grasslands in South America — not only releases greenhouse gases into the atmosphere when they are burned and plowed, but also deprives the planet of natural sponges to absorb carbon emissions. Cropland also absorbs far less carbon than the rain forests or even scrubland that it replaces.

Together the two studies offer sweeping conclusions: It does not matter if it is rain forest or scrubland that is cleared, the greenhouse gas contribution is significant. More important, they discovered that, taken globally, the production of almost all biofuels resulted, directly or indirectly, intentionally or not, in new lands being cleared, either for food or fuel.

“When you take this into account, most of the biofuel that people are using or planning to use would probably increase greenhouse gasses substantially,” said Timothy Searchinger, lead author of one of the studies and a researcher in environment and economics at Princeton University. “Previously there’s been an accounting error: land use change has been left out of prior analysis.”

These plant-based fuels were originally billed as better than fossil fuels because the carbon released when they were burned was balanced by the carbon absorbed when the plants grew. But even that equation proved overly simplistic because the process of turning plants into fuels causes its own emissions — for refining and transport, for example.

The clearance of grassland releases 93 times the amount of greenhouse gas that would be saved by the fuel made annually on that land, said Joseph Fargione, lead author of the second paper, and a scientist at the Nature Conservancy. “So for the next 93 years you’re making climate change worse, just at the time when we need to be bringing down carbon emissions.”

The Intergovernment Panel on Climate Change has said that the world has to reverse the increase of greenhouse gas emissions by 2020 to avert disastrous environment consequences.

In the wake of the new studies, a group of 10 of the United States’s most eminent ecologists and environmental biologists today sent a letter to President Bush and the speaker of the House, Nancy Pelosi, urging a reform of biofuels policies. “We write to call your attention to recent research indicating that many anticipated biofuels will actually exacerbate global warming,” the letter said.

The European Union and a number of European countries have recently tried to address the land use issue with proposals stipulating that imported biofuels cannot come from land that was previously rain forest.

But even with such restrictions in place, Dr. Searchinger’s study shows, the purchase of biofuels in Europe and the United States leads indirectly to the destruction of natural habitats far afield.

For instance, if vegetable oil prices go up globally, as they have because of increased demand for biofuel crops, more new land is inevitably cleared as farmers in developing countries try to get in on the profits. So crops from old plantations go to Europe for biofuels, while new fields are cleared to feed people at home.

Likewise, Dr. Fargione said that the dedication of so much cropland in the United States to growing corn for bioethanol had caused indirect land use changes far away. Previously, Midwestern farmers had alternated corn with soy in their fields, one year to the next. Now many grow only corn, meaning that soy has to be grown elsewhere.

Increasingly, that elsewhere, Dr. Fargione said, is Brazil, on land that was previously forest or savanna. “Brazilian farmers are planting more of the world’s soybeans — and they’re deforesting the Amazon to do it,” he said.

International environmental groups, including the United Nations, responded cautiously to the studies, saying that biofuels could still be useful. “We don’t want a total public backlash that would prevent us from getting the potential benefits,” said Nicholas Nuttall, spokesman for the United Nations Environment Program, who said the United Nations had recently created a new panel to study the evidence.

“There was an unfortunate effort to dress up biofuels as the silver bullet of climate change,” he said. “We fully believe that if biofuels are to be part of the solution rather than part of the problem, there urgently needs to be better sustainability criterion.”

The European Union has set a target that countries use 5.75 percent biofuel for transport by the end of 2008. Proposals in the United States energy package would require that 15 percent of all transport fuels be made from biofuel by 2022. To reach these goals, biofuels production is heavily subsidized at many levels on both continents, supporting a burgeoning global industry.

Syngenta, the Swiss agricultural giant, announced Thursday that its annual profits had risen 75 percent in the last year, in part because of rising demand for biofuels.

Industry groups, like the Renewable Fuels Association, immediately attacked the new studies as “simplistic,” failing “to put the issue into context.”

“While it is important to analyze the climate change consequences of differing energy strategies, we must all remember where we are today, how world demand for liquid fuels is growing, and what the realistic alternatives are to meet those growing demands,” said Bob Dineen, the group’s director, in a statement following the Science reports’ release.

“Biofuels like ethanol are the only tool readily available that can begin to address the challenges of energy security and environmental protection,” he said.

The European Biodiesel Board says that biodiesel reduces greenhouse gasses by 50 to 95 percent compared to conventional fuel, and has other advantages as well, like providing new income for farmers and energy security for Europe in the face of rising global oil prices and shrinking supply.

But the papers published Thursday suggested that, if land use is taken into account, biofuels may not provide all the benefits once anticipated.

Dr. Searchinger said the only possible exception he could see for now was sugar cane grown in Brazil, which take relatively little energy to grow and is readily refined into fuel. He added that governments should quickly turn their attention to developing biofuels that did not require cropping, such as those from agricultural waste products.

“This land use problem is not just a secondary effect — it was often just a footnote in prior papers,”. “It is major. The comparison with fossil fuels is going to be adverse for virtually all biofuels on cropland.”

China’s Environment, Health Examined

China’s Environment, Health Examined in New Wilson Center Report

China Environment Series Authors See Solutions in Regulation, Research, NGOs, and International Assistance

WASHINGTON, Feb. 7 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ — 2007 was a significant year for China’s environment. An estimated 750,000 people in China died from respiratory illnesses related to air pollution, while approximately 60,000 died from waterborne diseases. China’s food processing and production sectors made headlines around the globe. Growing desertification in north and northwest China due to excessive water use and land mismanagement created more intense sand storms that affected the economy and health in China and Northeast Asia. In addition, China most likely surpassed the United States as the leading emitter of greenhouse gasses — and while the central government set laudable energy efficiency goals, it recently admitted that China had not met them.

The latest edition of the China Environment Series (CES), the flagship publication of the China Environment Forum (CEF) (http://www.wilsoncenter.org/cef) at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars, examines these and other increasingly serious environmental problems in China, focusing on linkages between health and the environment and identifying promising trends and opportunities for U.S. collaboration with China.

Climate Change on Hong Kong and the Pearl River Delta

The impact of Climate Change on Hong Kong and the Pearl River Delta

CHANGES IN SEA LEVEL, TEMPERATURES AND PRECIPTATION IN THE GREATER PRD REGION

Current and predicted effects on the Greater PRD largely reflect global trends. The Hong Kong Observatory predicts that Hong Kong’s annual mean temperature will rise by 3.5 °C by the end of this century; and that although average annual rainfall will likely increase only slightly, year-to-year variability will increase, meaning more years with either heavier than usual or less than usual rainfall…

The full article is located here: http://www.nuova-energia.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=753&Itemid=113