tag:news.mongabay.com,2005:/xml/bold_and dangerous ideas that may save the world1bold and dangerous ideas that may save the world news from mongabay.com2012-02-02T17:55:33Ztag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/90382012-02-01T17:36:00Z2012-02-02T17:55:33ZNew meteorological theory argues that the world's forests are rainmakers<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://travel.mongabay.com/costa_rica/150/costa-rica_0737.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>New, radical theories in science often take time to be accepted, especially those that directly challenge longstanding ideas, contemporary policy or cultural norms. The fact that the Earth revolves around the sun, and not vice-versa, took centuries to gain widespread scientific and public acceptance. While Darwin's theory of evolution was quickly grasped by biologists, portions of the public today, especially in places like the U.S., still disbelieve. Currently, the near total consensus by climatologists that human activities are warming the Earth continues to be challenged by outsiders. Whether or not the biotic pump theory will one day fall into this grouping remains to be seen. First published in 2007 by two Russian physicists, Victor Gorshkov and Anastassia Makarieva, the still little-known biotic pump theory postulates that forests are the driving force behind precipitation over land masses. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/89472012-01-12T19:03:00Z2012-01-12T19:18:51ZTargeting methane, black carbon could buy world a little time on climate change<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://travel.mongabay.com/colombia/150/co02-9193.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>A new study in Science argues that reducing methane and black carbon emissions would bring global health, agriculture, and climate benefits. While such reductions would not replace the need to reduce CO2 emissions, they could have the result of lowering global temperature by 0.5 degrees Celsius (0.9 degree Fahrenheit) by mid-century, as well as having the added benefits of saving lives and boosting agricultural yields. In addition, the authors contend that dealing with black carbon and methane now would be inexpensive and politically feasible. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/89132012-01-02T17:39:00Z2012-01-02T17:59:36ZEcuador makes $116 million to not drill for oil in Amazon<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/0913yasunifrog.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>A possibly ground-breaking idea has been kept on life support after Ecuador revealed its Yasuni-ITT Initiative had raked in $116 million before the end of the year, breaking the $100 million mark that Ecuador said it needed to keep the program alive. Ecuador is proposing to <i>not</i> drill for an estimated 850 million barrels of oil in the Ishpingo-Tambococha-Tiputinin (ITT) blocs of Yasuni National Park if the international community pledges $3.6 billion to a United Nations Development Fund (UNDF), or about half of what the oil is currently worth. The Yasuni-ITT Initiative would preserve arguably the most biodiverse region on Earth from oil exploitation, safeguard indigenous populations, and keep an estimated 410 million tons of CO2 out of the atmosphere. However, the initiative is not without its detractors, some arguing the program is little more than blackmail; meanwhile proponents say it could prove an effective way to combat climate change, deforestation, and mass extinction.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/88892011-12-22T16:31:00Z2011-12-22T17:42:42ZTop 10 Environmental Stories of 2011<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/Sunny_Skies_over_the_Arctic_in_Late_June_2010.NASA.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Many of 2011's most dramatic stories on environmental issues came from people taking to the streets. With governments and corporations slow to tackle massive environmental problems, people have begun to assert themselves. Victories were seen on four continents: in Bolivia a draconian response to protestors embarrassed the government, causing them to drop plans to build a road through Tipnis, an indigenous Amazonian reserve; in Myanmar, a nation not known for bowing to public demands, large protests pushed the government to cancel a massive Chinese hydroelectric project; in Borneo a three-year struggle to stop the construction of a coal plant on the coast of the Coral Triangle ended in victory for activists; in Britain plans to privatize forests created such a public outcry that the government not only pulled back but also apologized; and in the U.S. civil disobedience and massive marches pressured the Obama Administration to delay a decision on the controversial Keystone XL pipeline, which would bring tar sands from Canada to a global market.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/88662011-12-19T14:48:00Z2011-12-19T17:29:53ZIs the Russian Forest Code a warning for Brazil?<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://travel.mongabay.com/brazil/150/brazil_0560.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Brazil, which last week moved to reform its Forest Code, may find lessons in Russia's revision of its forest law in 2007, say a pair of Russian scientists. The Brazilian Senate last week passed a bill that would relax some of forest provisions imposed on landowners. Environmentalists blasted the move, arguing that the new Forest Code — provided it is not vetoed by Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff next year — could undermine the country's progress in reducing deforestation.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/88592011-12-15T23:15:00Z2011-12-16T14:58:37ZREDD advances—slowly—in Durban<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/11/1214fao_tropical150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>A program proposed to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from deforestation and degradation made mixed progress during climate talks in Durban. Significant questions remain about financing and safeguards to protect against abuse, say forestry experts. REDD+ aims to reduce deforestation, forest degradation, and peatland destruction in tropical countries. Here, emissions from land use often exceed emissions from transportation and electricity generation. Under the program, industrialized nations would fund conservation projects and improved forest management. While REDD+ offers the potential to simultaneously reduce emissions, conserve biodiversity, maintain other ecosystem services, and help alleviate rural poverty, concerns over potential adverse impacts have plagued the program since its conception. Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/88352011-12-12T17:57:00Z2011-12-12T18:09:51ZMixed reactions to the Durban agreement<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/450px-Kentish_Flats_185488383_b48a2c2dcf_o.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Early Sunday morning over 190 of the world's countries signed on to a new climate agreement at the 17th UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in Durban, South Africa. The summit was supposed to end on Friday, but marathon negotiations pushed government officials to burn the midnight oil for about 36 extra hours. The final agreement was better than many expected out of the two week summit, but still very far from what science says is necessary to ensure the world does not suffer catastrophic climate change. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/88192011-12-08T17:32:00Z2011-12-09T13:38:36ZEvidence mounts that Maya did themselves in through deforestation <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://mongabay.com/images/yucatan/thumbnails/print/tulum_print_3.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Researchers have garnered further evidence for a smoking gun behind the fall of the great Maya civilization: deforestation. At the American Geophysical Union (AGU) conference, climatologist Ben Cook presented recent research showing how the destruction of rainforests by the Mayan ultimately led to declines in precipitation and possibly civilization-rocking droughts. While the idea that the Maya may have committed ecological-suicide through deforestation has been widely discussed, including in Jared Diamond's popular book Collapse, Cook's findings add greater weight to the theory. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/88172011-12-07T21:24:00Z2011-12-07T21:45:32ZYasuni ITT: the virtues and vices of environmental innovationAs the 17th Conference of the Parties to the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) is taking place in Durban, Ecuador has embarked on the development of a project presented as highly innovative. This project targets Yasuni National Park, which has been protected since 1979. Yasuni is home to several indigenous peoples and is a biodiversity hotspot. But it so happens that the park also sits atop a vast oil field of 846 million barrels, representing about 20 percent of the country’s oil reserves. The acronym Yasuni ITT stands for Ishpingo-Tambococha-Tiputinin, which are the names of three potential zones for oil extraction.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/86152011-10-31T00:05:00Z2011-11-01T00:45:16Z11 challenges facing 7 billion super-consumers<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://mongabay.s3.amazonaws.com/madagascar/150/madagascar_5995.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Perhaps the most disconcerting thing about Halloween this year is not the ghouls and goblins taking to the streets, but a baby born somewhere in the world. It's not the baby's or the parent's fault, of course, but this child will become a part of an artificial, but still important, milestone: according to the UN, the Earth's seventh billionth person will be born today. That's seven billion people who require, in the very least, freshwater, food, shelter, medicine, and education. In some parts of the world, they will also have a car, an iPod, a suburban house and yard, pets, computers, a lawn-mower, a microwave, and perhaps a swimming pool. Though rarely addressed directly in policy (and more often than not avoided in polite conversations), the issue of overpopulation is central to environmentally sustainability and human welfare. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/85462011-10-13T15:47:00Z2011-12-04T15:40:27ZFive ways to feed billions without trashing the planet<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://travel.mongabay.com/brazil/150/brazil_0307.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>At the end of this month the UN predicts global population will hit 7 billion people, having doubled from 3.5 billion in less than 50 years. Yet even as the Earth hits this new milestone, one billion people do not have enough food; meanwhile the rapid expansion of agriculture is one of the leading causes of global environmental degradation, including greenhouse gas emissions, destruction of forests, marine pollution, mass extinction, water scarcity, and soil degradation. So, how do we feed the human population—which continues to rise and is expected to hit nine billion by 2050—while preserving the multitude of ecosystem services that support global food production? A new study in <i>Nature</i> proposes a five-point plan to this dilemma.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/83532011-09-01T17:56:00Z2011-09-08T15:16:50ZControversial study finds intensive farming partnered with strict protected areas is best for biodiversity<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/phalan2HR.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Given that we have very likely entered an age of mass extinction—and human population continues to rise (not unrelated)—researchers are scrambling to determine the best methods to save the world's suffering species. In the midst of this debate, a new study in Science, which is bound to have detractors, has found that setting aside land for strict protection coupled with intensive farming is the best way to both preserve species and feed a growing human world. However, other researchers say the study is missing the point, both on global hunger and biodiversity.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/82432011-08-03T17:50:00Z2011-08-04T12:30:48ZProtected areas not enough to save life on Earth<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://s3.amazonaws.com/mongabay/indonesia/150/kalbar_2144.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Since the creation of Yellowstone National Park in 1872 protected areas have spread across the world. Today, over 100,000 protected areas—national parks, wildlife refuges, game reserves, marine protected areas (MPAs), wildlife sanctuaries, etc.—cover some 7.3 million square miles (19 million kilometers), mostly on land, though conservation areas in the oceans are spreading. While there are a number of reasons behind the establishment of protected areas, one of the most important is the conservation of wildlife for future generations. But now a new open access study in <i>Marine Ecology Progress Series</i> has found that protected areas are not enough to stem the loss of global biodiversity. Even with the volume of protected areas, many scientists say we are in the midst of a mass extinction with extinction levels jumping to 100 to 10,000 times the average rate over the past 500 million years. While protected areas are important, the study argues that society must deal with the underlying problems of human population and overconsumption if we are to have any chance of preserving life on Earth—and leaving a recognizable planet for our children. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/82132011-07-28T14:04:00Z2011-07-29T17:26:38ZAdaptation, justice and morality in a warming world <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/kenya_elf_0143a.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>If last year was the first in which climate change impacts became apparent worldwide—unprecedented drought and fires in Russia, megaflood in Pakistan, record drought in the Amazon, deadly floods in South America, plus record highs all over the place—this may be the year in which the American public sees climate change as no longer distant and abstract, but happening at home. With burning across the southwest, record drought in Texas, majors flooding in the Midwest, heatwaves everywhere, its becoming harder and harder to ignore the obvious. Climate change consultant and blogger, Brian Thomas, says these patterns are pushing 'prominent scientists' to state 'more explicitly that the pattern we're seeing today shows a definite climate change link,' but that it may not yet change the public perception in the US. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/80122011-06-13T22:33:00Z2011-06-15T15:31:24ZGermany backs out of Yasuni deal<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/0913yasunifrog.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Germany has backed out of a pledge to commit $50 million a year to Ecuador's Yasuni ITT Initiative, reports Science Insider. The move by Germany potentially upsets an innovative program hailed by environmentalists and scientists alike. This one-of-a-kind initiative would protect a 200,000 hectare bloc in Yasuni National Park from oil drilling in return for a trust fund of $3.6 billion, or about half the market value of the nearly billion barrels of oil lying underneath the area. The plan is meant to mitigate climate change, protect biodiversity, and safeguard the rights of indigenous people. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/78612011-05-14T19:22:00Z2011-05-15T21:35:11ZProgram that cuts illegal logging by providing high quality health care in Borneo wins major conservation awardThe co-founder of an initiative that discourages illegal logging by bringing affordable, high quality health care to impoverished communities in Indonesian Borneo has been recognized with a prestigious conservation award.Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/77992011-04-28T17:41:00Z2011-04-29T14:02:19ZScientists scramble to save dying amphibians<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://mongabay.s3.amazonaws.com/11/0428panama-_1147_150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>In forests, ponds, swamps, and other ecosystems around the world, amphibians are dying at rates never before observed. The reasons are many: habitat destruction, pollution from pesticides, climate change, invasive species, and the emergence of a deadly and infectious fungal disease. More than 200 species have gone silent, while scientists estimate one third of the more than 6,500 known species are at risk of extinction. Conservationists have set up an an emergency conservation measure to capture wild frogs from infected areas and safeguard them in captivity until the disease is controlled or at least better understood. The frogs will be bred in captivity as an insurance policy against extinction.Rhett Butlertag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/77762011-04-22T03:26:00Z2011-05-01T18:42:13ZWhat does Nature give us? A special Earth Day article<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/sumatra_0556.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>There is no question that Earth has been a giving planet. Everything humans have needed to survive, and thrive, was provided by the natural world around us: food, water, medicine, materials for shelter, and even natural cycles such as climate and nutrients. Scientists have come to term such gifts 'ecosystem services', however the recognition of such services goes back thousands of years, and perhaps even farther if one accepts the caves paintings at Lascaux as evidence. Yet we have so disconnected ourselves from the natural world that it is easy—and often convenient—to forget that nature remains as giving as ever, even as it vanishes bit-by-bit. The rise of technology and industry may have distanced us superficially from nature, but it has not changed our reliance on the natural world: most of what we use and consume on a daily basis remains the product of multitudes of interactions within nature, and many of those interactions are imperiled. Beyond such physical goods, the natural world provides less tangible, but just as important, gifts in terms of beauty, art, and spirituality.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/74052011-02-07T17:51:00Z2011-05-16T15:34:13ZThe ocean crisis: hope in troubled waters, an interview with Carl Safina<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/lazy.point.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Being compared—by more than one reviewer—to Henry Thoreau and Rachel Carson would make any nature writer's day. But add in effusive reviews that compare one to a jazz musician, Ernest Hemingway, and Charles Darwin, and you have a sense of the praise heaped on Carl Safina for his newest work, The View from Lazy Point: A Natural Year in an Unnatural World. Like Safina's other books, The View from Lazy Point focuses on the beauty, poetry, and crisis of the world's oceans and its hundreds-of-thousands of unique inhabitants. Taking the reader on a journey around the world—the Arctic, Antarctic, and the tropics—Safina always returns home to take in the view, and write about the wildlife of his home, i.e. Lazy Point, on Long Island. While Safina's newest book addresses the many ways in which the ocean is being degraded, depleted, and ultimately imperiled as a living ecosystem (such as overfishing and climate change) it also tweezes out stories of hope by focusing on how single animals survive, and in turn how nature survives in an increasingly human world. However, what makes Safina's work different than most nature writing is his ability to move seamlessly from contemporary practical problems to the age-old philosophical underpinnings that got us here. By doing so, he points a way forward. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/73492011-01-26T22:39:00Z2011-01-26T23:00:04ZIs Obama's clean energy revolution possible? Last night US President Barack Obama called for a massive green energy make-over of the world's largest economy. Describing the challenge as 'this generation's Sputnik moment' the US president set a goal of producing 80 percent of America's energy by clean sources by 2035. While this may sound improbable, two recent analyses back the president up, arguing that a global clean energy revolution is entirely possible within a few decades using contemporary technology and without breaking the bank. "Based on our findings, there are no technological or economic barriers to converting the entire world to clean, renewable energy sources," Mark Z. Jacobson, a professor of civil and environmental engineering at Stanford said in a press release. "It is a question of whether we have the societal and political will."Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/73202011-01-20T21:50:00Z2011-01-26T00:46:28ZHow Genghis Khan cooled the planet <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/genghis_kahn.150.JPG " align="left"/></td></tr></table>In 1206 AD Genghis Khan began the Mongol invasion: a horse-crazed bow-wielding military force that swept through much of modern-day Asia into the Middle East and Eastern Europe. But aside from creating the world's largest empire, the Mongol invasion had another global impact that has remained hidden in history according to new research by Julia Pongratz of the Carnegie Institution's Department of Global Ecology. Genghis Khan and his empire, which lasted nearly two centuries, actually cooled the Earth. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/70932010-11-23T01:17:00Z2010-11-30T00:05:43ZOil, indigenous people, and Ecuador's big idea<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/yasuni_359.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Ecuador's big idea—potentially Earth-rattling—goes something like this: the international community pays the small South American nation <i>not</i> to drill for nearly a billion barrels of oil in a massive block of Yasuni National Park. While Ecuador receives hundred of millions in an UN-backed fund, what does the international community receive? Arguably the world's most biodiverse rainforest is saved from oil extraction, two indigenous tribes' requests to be left uncontacted are respected, and some 400 million metric tons of CO2 is not emitted from burning the oil. In other words, the international community is being asked to put money where its mouth is on climate change, indigenous rights, and biodiversity loss. David Romo Vallejo, professor at the University of San Francisco Quito and co-director of Tiputini research station in Yasuni, recently told mongabay.com in an interview that this is "the best proposal so far made to ensure the protection of this incredible site." Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/70132010-11-07T21:33:00Z2010-11-07T22:25:58ZWill biodiversity agreement save life on Earth?<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/sulawesi-tangkoko_0353.150.jpg " align="left"/></td></tr></table>On Friday, October 29th, 193 member nations of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) reached a possibly landmark agreement on saving the world's suffering biodiversity in Nagoya, Japan. The agreement was especially notable after nations failed—by all accounts—to live up to the goals from the previous CBD agreement, including stemming the global loss of biodiversity by 2010. According to scientists, the world's species continue to vanish at mass-extinction rates due to habitat loss, deforestation, overconsumption, pollution, climate change, and invasive species. To addresses this crisis the new CBD agreement sets out 20 goals for 2020. But given the global challenges in saving the world's species and the lack-of-teeth in agreement (it is strictly voluntary), will the CBD make a difference or in ten years time will goals be again unmet and life on planet Earth worse off than ever? To answer this mongabay.com turned to a number of experts in the conservation world. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/69742010-10-31T19:36:00Z2010-10-31T19:39:13ZMixed messages on geoengineering: international community approves moratorium, US pushes researchEfforts to explore geoengineering, whereby governments would employ large-scale projects to alter the world's climate in a bid to combat climate change, received mixed messages this week. In Nagoya, Japan—where all but three of the world's nations (the US, Andorra, and the Holy See) met at the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) to hammer out an agreement on stemming biodiversity loss—member nations agreed on Friday to a moratorium on geoengineering schemes. On the same day a US congressional report on geoengineering, which it termed climate engineering, recommended "research now to better understand which technologies or methods, if any, represent viable stopgap strategies for managing our changing climate."Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/69652010-10-28T16:59:00Z2010-10-29T17:40:20ZHarrison Ford chides US for spurning international biodiversity treaty In a speech in Nagoya, Japan at the UN's Convention for Biological Diversity (CBD) actor and conservationist, Harrison Ford, called on delegates to put aside differences and adopt a strong treaty to protect biodiversity. As a US citizen, he also urged his country to become a full signatory of the CBD. "The time has come for the United States to step up to the plate. The problem is so big and the time is so short, we have no choice. We have to act and we have to act now," said Ford.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/69642010-10-28T10:20:00Z2010-10-30T21:48:07ZUndergrads in the Amazon: American students witness beauty and crisis in Yasuni National Park, Ecuador <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/trevor.undergrad.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Although most Americans have likely seen photos and videos of the world's largest rainforest, the Amazon, they will probably never see it face-to-face. For many, the Amazon seems incredibly remote: it is a dim, mysterious place, a jungle surfeit in adventure and beauty—but not a place to take a family vacation or spend a honeymoon. This means that the destruction of the Amazon, like the rainforest itself, also appears distant when seen from Oregon or North Carolina or Pennsylvania. Oil spills in Ecuador, cattle ranching in Brazil, hydroelectric dams in Peru: these issues are low, if not non-existent, for most Americans. But a visit to the Amazon changes all that. This was recently confirmed to me when I traveled with American college students during a trip to far-flung Yasuni National Park in Ecuador. As a part of a study abroad program with the University of San Francisco in Quito and the Galapagos Academic Institute for the Arts and Sciences (GAIAS), these students spend a semester studying ecology and environmental issues in Ecuador, including a first-time visit to the Amazon rainforest at Tiputini Biodiversity Station in Yasuni—and our trips just happened to overlap.
Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/69282010-10-20T19:59:00Z2010-10-20T21:28:10ZJackpot: how international community could raise $141 billion for biodiversityLeaders from around the world meeting in Nahoya, Japan for the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) to discuss solutions to stem the current mass extinction crisis may be in need of a little book: <i>The Little Biodiversity Finance Book</i>. While a recent report by The Economics of Ecosystems and Biodiversity (TEEB) found that degradation of ecosystems—including biodiversity loss—was costing the global economy $2-5 trillion annually, one of the primary threats to wildlife around the world is simply a lack of funds to enact program. But <i>The Little Biodiversity Finance Book</i> says that with the right policy initiatives the burgeoning ecosystem market could be worth $141 billion by 2020. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/69212010-10-18T19:30:00Z2010-10-19T15:30:09ZEnvironmentalists must recognize 'biases and delusions' to succeed As nations from around the world meet at the Convention on Biological Diversity in Nagoya, Japan to discuss ways to stem the loss of biodiversity worldwide, two prominent researchers argue that conservationists need to consider paradigm shifts if biodiversity is to be preserved, especially in developing countries. Writing in the journal <i>Biotropica</i>, Douglas Sheil and Erik Meijaard argue that some of conservationists' most deeply held beliefs are actually hurting the cause. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/69042010-10-13T17:23:00Z2010-10-13T18:13:14ZHumanity consuming the Earth: by 2030 we'll need two planets<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/minnesota_021.thumb.jpg " align="left"/></td></tr></table>Too many people consuming too much is depleting the world's natural resources faster than they are replenished, imperiling not only the world's species but risking the well-being of human societies, according to a new massive study by the World Wildlife Fund (WWF), entitled the Living Planet Report. The report finds that humanity is currently consuming the equivalent of 1.5 planet Earths every year for its activities. This overconsumption has caused biodiversity—in this case, representative populations of vertebrate animals—to fall by 30 percent worldwide since 1970. The situation is more dire in tropical regions where terrestrial species' populations have fallen by 60 percent and freshwater species by 70 percent. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/68992010-10-12T16:37:00Z2010-10-12T17:03:31ZFarms in the sky, an interview with Dickson Despommier<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://travel.mongabay.com/china/150/china_103-6990.JPG" align="left"/></td></tr></table>To solve today's environmental crises—climate change, deforestation, mass extinction, and marine degradation—while feeding a growing population (on its way to 9 billion) will require not only thinking outside the box, but a "new box altogether" according to Dr. Dickson Despommier, author of the new book, The Vertical Farm. Exciting policy-makers and environmentalists, Despommier's bold idea for skyscrapers devoted to agriculture is certainly thinking outside the box. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/68922010-10-11T17:17:00Z2010-10-11T17:38:04ZCitizens of 188 countries challenge leaders on climate change <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/climateworkparty.nz.150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>As world leaders continue to fumble a coherent, rapid, and comprehensive response to climate change, citizens from around the world yesterday sent a message to inert politicians by participating in over 7,300 events against climate change, according to 350.org, the head organizer of the day dubbed the 'Global Work Party'. "The fossil fuel industry may have thought that the collapse of the Copenhagen talks and its victory in the U.S. Congress were the final word—that people would give up in discouragement," said, Bill McKibben, founder of 350.org, so-called because 350 parts per millions (ppm) is the 'safe' amount of carbon in the atmosphere according to many scientists. Currently the concentration is around 390 ppm. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/68702010-10-06T03:10:00Z2010-10-06T03:48:38ZThe Nestlé example: how responsible companies could end deforestation <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/tft.logo.thumb.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>The NGO, The Forest Trust (TFT), made international headlines this year after food giant Nestlé chose them to monitor their sustainability efforts. Nestlé's move followed a Greenpeace campaign that blew-up into a blistering free-for-all on social media sites. For months Nestle was dogged online not just for sourcing palm oil connected to deforestation in Southeast Asia—the focus of Greenpeace's campaign—but for a litany of perceived social and environmental abuses and Nestlé's reactions, which veered from draconian to clumsy to stonily silent. The announcement on May 17th that Nestlé was bending to demands to rid its products of deforestation quickly quelled the storm. Behind the scenes, Nestlé and TFT had been meeting for a number of weeks before the partnership was made official. But can TFT ensure consumers that Nestlé is truly moving forward on cutting deforestation from all of its products? Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/68622010-10-04T21:38:00Z2010-10-05T01:44:08ZLosing nature's medicine cabinet<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://travel.mongabay.com/kenya/150/kenya_1079.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>In all the discussions of saving the world's biodiversity from extinction, one point is often and surprisingly forgotten: the importance of the world's species in providing humankind with a multitude of life-saving medicines so far, as well as the certainty that more vital medications are out there if only we save the unheralded animals and plants that contain cures unknown. Already, species have provided humankind everything from quinine to aspirin, from morphine to numerous cancer and HIV-fighting drugs. "As the ethnobotanist Dr. Mark Plotkin commented, the history of medicine can be written in terms of its reliance on and utilization of natural products," physician Christopher Herndon told mongabay.com. Herndon is co-author of a recent paper in the journal Biotropica, which calls for policy-makers and the public to recognize how biodiversity underpins not only ecosystems, but medicine.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/68232010-09-27T20:15:00Z2010-09-27T20:40:13ZCould industrial interests ruin payments for environmental services?One of the biggest ideas in the conservation world over the past decade is Payments for Environmental Services, known as PES, whereby governments, corporations, or the public pays for the environmental services that benefit them (and to date have been free), i.e. carbon, biodiversity, freshwater, etc. For example, Reducing Emissions through Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD+) is the largest such proposed PES concept, yet many others are emerging. However, a new study in mongabay.com's open access journal <i>Tropical Conservation Science</i> argues that in order for PES to be effective—and not perversely lead to further harm—decision-makers must consider the danger of paying industrial and commercial interests versus financially supporting local populations, as originally conceived, to safeguard the environment.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/66322010-08-16T16:14:00Z2010-08-18T21:53:32ZCould biochar save the world?<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/09/0519biochar150.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>Biochar—the agricultural application of charcoal produced from burning biomass—may be one of this century's most important social and environmental revolutions. This seemingly humble practice—a technology that goes back thousands of years—has the potential to help mitigate a number of entrenched global problems: desperate hunger, lack of soil fertility in the tropics, rainforest destruction due to slash-and-burn agriculture, and even climate change. "Biochar is a recalcitrant form of carbon that will stay almost entirely unaltered in soils for very long periods of time. So you can sequester carbon in a simple, durable and safe way by putting the char in the soil. Other types of carbon in soils rapidly turn into carbon dioxide. Char doesn't," managing director of the Biochar Fund, Laurens Rademakers, told mongabay.com in a recent interview. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/66072010-08-12T21:11:00Z2010-08-12T21:29:06ZLogged forests retain considerable biodiversity in Borneo providing conservation opportunity <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://travel.mongabay.com/malaysia/150/borneo_3021.JPG" align="left"/></td></tr></table>A new study in the <i>Proceedings of the Royal Society B</i> finds that forests which have undergone logging in the past, sometimes even twice, retain significant levels of biodiversity in Borneo. The researchers say these findings should push conservationists to protect more logged forests from being converted into oil palm plantations where biodiversity levels drop considerably and endangered species are almost wholly absent. Given that much of Borneo's forests have been logged as least once, these long-dismissed forests could become a new frontier for conservationists. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/65852010-08-05T21:35:00Z2010-08-06T15:02:11ZHunting threatens the other Amazon: where harpy eagles are common and jaguars easy to spot, an interview with Paul Rosolie<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/jaguar.thumb.JPG " align="left"/></td></tr></table>If you have been fortunate enough to visit the Amazon or any other great rainforest, you've probably been wowed by the multitude and diversity of life. However, you also likely quickly realized that the deep jungle is not quite what you may have imagined when you were a child: you don't watch as jaguars wrestle with giant anteaters or anacondas circle prey. Instead life in the Amazon is small: insects, birds, frogs. Even biologists will tell you that you can spend years in the Amazon and never see a single jaguar. Yet rainforest guide and modern day explorer Paul Rosolie says there is another Amazon, one so pristine and with such wild abundance that it seems impossible to imagine if not for Rosolie's stories, photos, and soon videos. This is an Amazon where the big animals—jaguars, tapir, anaconda, giant anteaters, and harpy eagles—are not only abundant but visible. Free from human impact and overhunting, these remote places—off the beaten path of tourists—are growing ever smaller and, according to Rosolie, are in danger of disappearing forever. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/65732010-08-03T18:45:00Z2010-08-03T19:15:47ZBold rainforest idea makes good: Ecuador secures trust fund to save park from oil developers<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://travel.mongabay.com/colombia/150/co06-1340.jpg" align="left"/></td></tr></table>In what may amount to a historic moment in the quest to save the world's rainforests and mitigate climate change, Ecuador and the United Nations Development Fund (UNDF) have created a trust fund to protect one of the world's most biodiverse rainforests from oil exploration and development. The fund will allow the international community to pay Ecuador to leave an estimated 850 million barrels of oil in Yasuni National Park in the ground instead of extracting it. This first-of-its-kind agreement, known as the Yasuni-ITT Initiative, will allow the rainforest protected area to remain pristine: preserving one of the most species-rich places on Earth, safeguarding the lives of indigenous people, and keeping an estimated 410 million tons of CO2 out of the atmosphere. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/65582010-07-29T17:44:00Z2010-07-29T18:18:31ZVisiting the Gulf: how wildlife and people are faring in America's worst environmental disaster, an interview with Jennifer Jacquet<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/jacquetinterview1.thumb.jpg " align="left"/></td></tr></table>"President Obama called it 'the worst environmental disaster America has ever faced.' So I thought I should face it and head to the Gulf"—these are the opening words on the popular blog Guilty Planet as the author, marine biologist Jennifer Jacquet, embarked on a ten day trip to Louisiana. As a scientist, Jacquet was, of course, interested in the impact of the some four million barrels of oil on the Gulf's already depleted ecosystem, however she was as equally keen to see how Louisianans were coping with the fossil fuel-disaster that devastated their most vital natural resource just four years after Hurricane Katrina.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/65372010-07-25T17:08:00Z2010-08-06T13:05:22ZWho's really accountable for the BP oil spill?<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/oiledpelicans.thumb.jpg " align="left"/></td></tr></table>Reading articles in the newspapers recently and online, I find the media's focus is on scrutinizing BP's way of paying for the damage done when an estimated 76,934,000 gallons of their oil leaked out into the Gulf of Mexico after the explosion of their Deepwater Horizon rig in April. It is not that they are being criticised for not standing up and taking full responsibility for their recklessness that caused the spill, but instead they are being accused of not paying enough money for its clean-up. Taxpayers are outraged that they may pick-up the tab and are demanding to know why they should be held accountable when the disaster wasn’t their fault. Yet, do we not all have a part to play in this catastrophe?Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/64972010-07-13T20:27:00Z2010-07-13T21:07:50ZLarge-scale forest destruction in Sumatra undermines Indonesia's deal with Norway <table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/5_srl_indragiri_flyov_1_jpg.thumb.jpg " align="left"/></td></tr></table>While the Indonesian government basks in a recent agreement with Norway to slow deforestation to the tune of a billion US dollars, a new report by Eyes on the Forest shows photographic evidence of largely government sanctioned deforestation that flouts several Indonesia laws. Potentially embarrassing, the report and photos reveal that two companies, Asian Pulp and Paper (APP) and Asia Pacific Resource International (APRIL), have destroyed 5 percent of Riau province's forests since 2009, including deep peatlands, high conservation value forests (HCVF), Critically Endangered Sumatran tiger habitat, and forest within the Giam Siak Kecil- Bukit Batu UNESCO Biosphere Reserve. In total, over 130,000 hectares (an area larger than Hong Kong) of mostly peat forest were destroyed for pulp. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/64852010-07-12T23:44:00Z2010-07-12T23:53:30ZPaying for nature: putting a price on 'ecosystem services' Ever since humans entered the stage, nature has been providing us with a wide-variety of essential and 'free' services: food production, pollination, soil health, water filtration, and carbon sequestration to name a few. Experts have come to call these 'ecosystem services'. Such services, although vital for an inhabitable planet, have largely gone undervalued in the industrial age, at least officially. Yet as environmental crises pile one on another across the world, a growing number of scientists, economists, environmentalists, and policy-makers are beginning to consider putting a monetary value on 'ecosystem services'. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/64842010-07-12T19:33:00Z2010-07-14T14:39:20ZUK's Royal Society to undertake 'comprehensive review' of population growthThe UK's Royal Society has announced that it will begin a major study into the impacts of human population. A largely taboo topic for decades, the Royal Society wants to provide a 'comprehensive review of the science' of population growth, according to a press release. The study, due in 2012, will focus especially on sustainable development in the face of population growth. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/64462010-07-07T16:40:00Z2010-07-07T17:07:53ZViolence a part of the illegal timber trade, says kidnapped activist<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/Indonesia_Kalimantan_Faith_Doherty.thumb.jpg " align="left"/></td></tr></table>The European parliament made a historical move today when it voted overwhelmingly to ban illegal timber from its markets. For activists worldwide the ban on illegal timber in the EU is a reason to celebrate, but for one activist, Faith Doherty of the Environmental Investigation Agency (EIA), the move has special resonance. In early 2000, Doherty and an Indonesian colleague were kidnapped, beaten, and threatened with a gun by illegal loggers in Indonesian Borneo. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/64252010-07-05T22:34:00Z2010-07-06T14:11:58ZIn the midst of marine collapse will we save our last ocean?<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/ainley.penguin.thumb.jpg " align="left"/></td></tr></table>Imagine an ocean untouched by oil spills: a sea free of pollution, invasive species, dead zones, and over-exploitation; waters where marine animals exist in natural abundance and play ecological roles undimmed by mankind. Such a place may sound impossible in today's largely depleted oceans, but it exists: only discovered in 1841, the Ross Sea spreads over nearly a million kilometers adjacent to the Antarctic continent. Here killer whales, penguins, sea birds, whales, and giant fish all thrive. However, even with its status as the world's 'last ocean', the Ross Sea has not escaped human impact. Over the last 15 years commercial fisheries have begun to catch one of its most important species in the ecosystem to serve them up on the dinner plates of the wealthy. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/62602010-06-14T19:24:00Z2010-06-14T19:38:15ZNew UN panel to focus on saving life on EarthIn South Korea last week 230 delegates from 85 nations approved a new UN science panel focusing on saving life on Earth, known as the Intergovernmental Science Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services (IPBES). The panel, which is to be modeled off of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), is meant to bridge the gap between scientific understanding of biodiversity loss and the policy decisions necessary to stop it. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/62582010-06-14T16:26:00Z2010-06-14T16:39:49ZInga alley cropping: a sustainable alternative to slash and burn agricultureIt has been estimated that as many as 300 million farmers in tropical countries may take part in slash and burn agriculture. A practice that is environmentally destructive and ultimately unstable. However, research funded by the EEC and carried out in Costa Rica in the late 1980s and early 1990s by Mike Hands offers hope that it is possible to farm more successfully and sustainably in these tropical regions.Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/62062010-06-06T22:52:00Z2010-06-10T20:10:54ZIndonesia identifies possible sites for forest conservation pilot projectThe government of Indonesia has named four forests which could serve as pilot projects for its conservation deal with Norway, according to the <i>Jakarta Post</i>. The deal, including a billion US dollar donation from Norway, is meant to help Indonesia stem rampant deforestation throughout the nation, which has pushed Indonesia to become the world's third highest greenhouse gas emitter. Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/61792010-06-02T19:18:00Z2012-01-19T05:45:00ZA total ban on primary forest logging needed to save the world, an interview with activist Glen Barry<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/glen.barry.thumb.gif " align="left"/></td></tr></table>Radical, controversial, ahead-of-his-time, brilliant, or extremist: call Dr. Glen Barry, the head of Ecological Internet, what you will, but there is no question that his environmental advocacy group has achieved major successes in the past years, even if many of these are below the radar of big conservation groups and mainstream media. "We tend to be a little different than many organizations in that we do take a deep ecology, or biocentric approach," Barry says of the organization he heads. "[Ecological Internet] is very, very concerned about the state of the planet. It is my analysis that we have passed the carrying capacity of the Earth, that in several matters we have crossed different ecosystem tipping points or are near doing so. And we really act with more urgency, and more ecological science, than I think the average campaign organization."Jeremy Hancetag:news.mongabay.com,2005:Article/61332010-05-28T00:49:00Z2010-05-28T01:47:55ZIndonesia announces moratorium on granting new forest concessions<table align="left"><tr><td><img src="http://photos.mongabay.com/j/kalimantan_0039.thumb.jpg " align="left"/></td></tr></table>With one of the highest rates of deforestation in the world, the world's third largest greenhouse gas emissions due mostly to forest loss, and with a rich biodiversity that is fighting to survive amid large-scale habitat loss, Indonesia today announced a deal that may be the beginning of stopping forest loss in the Southeast Asian country. Indonesia announced a two year moratorium on granting new concessions of rainforest and peat forest for clearing in Oslo, Norway, however concessions already granted to companies will not be stopped. The announcement came as Indonesia received 1 billion US dollars from Norway to help the country stop deforestation. Jeremy Hance