Saiga Antelopes Are Struck Again by a Plague in Central Asia

The carcasses of saiga antelopes in Mongolia’s western Khovd province. Scientists have identified the culprit as a virus known as goat plague. Credit WCS

They found the first carcasses in late December, on the frozen steppes of Mongolia’s western Khovd province.

By the end of January, officials in the region had recorded the deaths of 2,500 endangered saiga antelopes — about a quarter of the country’s saiga population — and scientists had identified a culprit: a virus called peste des petits ruminants, or P.P.R., also known as goat plague.

It was the first time the disease, usually seen in goats, sheep and other small livestock, had been found in free-ranging antelopes. For the saiga, an ancient animal that once roamed the grasslands of the world with the woolly mammoth and the saber-toothed tiger, the outbreak was potentially catastrophic.

The antelope’s numbers, once in the millions, have been severely depleted by illegal hunting, habitat loss and competition for food. The species is described as critically endangered on the International Union for Conservation of Nature’s Red List.

Continue reading on New York Times

In 2015, 211,000 saigas in Kazakhstan — more than half of the entire antelope species — were wiped out by a bacterial infection in less than a month.

Is Vietnam in for Another Devastating Drought?

February 08, 2017

Lessons learned from last year’s disaster can shape a climate-resilient approach in the Mekong Delta.

Is Vietnam in for Another Devastating Drought?
A farmer burns his dried-up rice on a paddy field stricken by drought in Soc Trang province in the Mekong Delta in Vietnam (March 30, 2016).
Image Credit: REUTERS/Kham

 

The Tet Holiday (Vietnamese lunar New Year) has come to an end, marking the commencement of a new dry season in Vietnam’s lower Mekong Delta. Right now in coastal provinces around the Delta, thousands of farmers, especially those who miserably suffered during last year’s historic drought, are mobilizing to prepare for another similarly devastating drought, which is expected to arrive in the Delta in a few weeks.

During last year’s dry season, the record drought, followed by saltwater intrusion, cost Vietnam VND 15 trillion ($669 million) due to the heavy toll on agricultural production. It also caused dire humanitarian and other economic impacts: almost half a million households lacked fresh drinking water and experienced food shortages and thousands of affected people had to migrate to urban areas in search of jobs. The drought was mainly caused by Mekong upstream dams built by China in connection with El Nino effects. Tiếp tục đọc “Is Vietnam in for Another Devastating Drought?”

Hundreds of whales wash up dead on New Zealand beach

WELLINGTON: More than 400 whales were stranded on a New Zealand beach on Friday (Feb 10), with hundreds already dead as volunteers tried to refloat the survivors, the Department of Conservation said.

Andrew Lamason, spokesman for the department, said it was one of the largest mass beachings recorded in New Zealand, where strandings are relatively common.

Lamason said 416 pilot whales beached themselves overnight at Farewell Spit in the Golden Bay region at the northern tip of South Island.

He said about 70 per cent had perished and attempts were underway to get the remaining whales offshore at high tide but the outlook was gloomy.

“With that number dead, you have to assume that the rest are in reasonably poor nick as well,” he told Radio New Zealand. “So we’re sort of preparing ourselves for a pretty traumatic period ahead.”

Taiwanese woman jailed for shark fins’ haul in Costa Rica

SAN JOSE: A Costa Rican court has sentenced a Taiwanese business owner to prison over a fishing haul of illegally hacked-off shark fins destined for sale abroad, officials and environmentalists said on Thursday (Feb 9).

The businesswoman, identified by her last name of Tseng, was ordered to spend six months behind bars. The verdict was handed down on Monday by the court in the western port city of Puntarenas.

It was the first criminal sentence in the country against the practice of shark finning, which involves slicing off a shark’s fins before dropping the live fish back in the sea. Unable to swim effectively, the wounded creature faces a grim future: suffocating, starving or being eaten.

Shark fins fetch a high price in Asia, where they are often used in soups served on special occasions.

Tseng’s was “a historic sentence,” said Gladys Martinez, lawyer for the Interamerican Association for Environmental Defense (AIDA).

Her case began in October 2011, when her fishing boat, the Wan Jia Men 88, was found with 151 sharks aboard. Their fins had been chopped off.

She was initially acquitted in 2014, but the matter went to appeal, and the Puntarenas court this week found her responsible for damage to Costa Rica’s natural resources.

The Central American country, known for its biodiversity, has ratified several treaties for the protection and sustainable use of marine resources.

‘Irrational’ Coal Plants May Hamper China’s Climate Change Efforts

The China Kingho Energy Group’s coal-to-gas plant in Chuluqay, Xinjiang, China, in 2014. Credit Benjamin Haas/Bloomberg

YINING, China — When scientists and environmental scholars scan the grim industrial landscape of China, a certain coal plant near the rugged Kazakhstan border stands out.

On the outside, it looks like any other modern energy plant — shiny metal towers loom over the grassy grounds, and workers in hard hats stroll the campus. But in those towers, a rare and contentious process is underway, spewing an alarming amount of carbon dioxide, the main greenhouse gas accelerating climate change.

The plant and others like it undermine China’s aim of being a global leader on efforts to limit climate change.

The plant, in the country’s far west, converts coal to synthetic natural gas. The process, called coal-to-gas or coal gasification, has been criticized by Chinese and foreign scholars and policy makers. For one thing, it is relatively expensive. It also requires enormous amounts of water, which exacerbates the chronic water crisis in northern China. And worst of all, critics say, it emits more carbon dioxide than traditional methods of energy production, even other coal-based ways.

Continue reading on New York Times

Bacteria to improve sanitation on Southeast Asia’s largest lake

KAMPONG CHHNANG, Cambodia: Piles of rotten garbage and a choking odour engulfed the bank of Tonle Sap near a small harbour in Chhnok Tru, Kampong Chhnang. Most of the rubbish, from plastic bags to human waste and animal carcasses, came from a fresh market a few steps away.

For visitors, the experience may be shocking. But for the inhabitants of Tonle Sap – Southeast Asia’s largest freshwater lake stretching 13,000 sqkm across five Cambodian provinces – that is the only environment they know, and it is getting worse. Tiếp tục đọc “Bacteria to improve sanitation on Southeast Asia’s largest lake”

Phát triển bền vững ở Tây Nguyên

– Tính nghiêm trọng của các vấn đề Tây Nguyên. Làm gì để giải quyết?

Nguyên Ngọc

I – Một số nét tổng quan

A – Khái niệm Tây Nguyên :

Theo địa lý hành chính hiện nay, Tây Nguyên gồm có năm tỉnh, kể từ bắc vào nam : Kontum, Gia Lai, Đắc Lắc, Đắc Nông, Lâm Đồng.

Tiếp tục đọc “Phát triển bền vững ở Tây Nguyên”

Thế là Nàng đã mang thai!

>> Mùa Voi Yêu

Ký sự của Hoàng Thiên Nga

          Kết quả siêu âm cho thấy nàng voi Ban Nang dự sinh vào cuối thu năm 2017, quả là đại hỷ cho tất cả những người yêu voi, mong muốn đàn voi nhà Đắk Lắk sinh sôi phát triển. Vì đã hơn 30 năm, đồng bào các dân tộc Tây Nguyên không thấy voi con nào chào đời từ những nàng voi nhà đang dần qua tuổi làm mẹ…

Kết quả siêu âm cho thấy voi cái Ban Nang đã mang thai
Kết quả siêu âm cho thấy voi cái Ban Nang đã mang thai

Tiếp tục đọc “Thế là Nàng đã mang thai!”

Hackers Scrambling to Save Climate Data from Trump Administration

David Z. Morris

Jan 23, 2017

Fortune_Wired has provided a glimpse into an initiative to download and securely store reams of climate and environmental data from the Environmental Protection Agency and National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration as the Trump administration takes power. The organizers of the work, including some based at the University of Toronto, were initially motivated by widespread environmental data destruction under Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper.

Tiếp tục đọc “Hackers Scrambling to Save Climate Data from Trump Administration”

Vietnam punishes 4 officials over Formosa environmental disaster

HANOI: Vietnam said on Thursday (Jan 26) it would punish four officials over one of its worst environmental disasters, caused by a unit of Taiwan conglomerate Formosa Plastics, in the first action against government officials ten months after the accident.

Formosa Ha Tinh Steel, which runs an US$11 billion steel plant, polluted more than 200km (125 miles) of coastline in April, killing more than 100 tonnes of fish and devastating the environment, jobs and economies of four provinces. Tiếp tục đọc “Vietnam punishes 4 officials over Formosa environmental disaster”

6 Environment and Development Stories to Watch in 2017

http://www.wri.org/blog/2017/01/6-environment-and-development-stories-watch-2017?utm_campaign=wridigest&utm_source=wridigest-2017-01-11&utm_medium=email&utm_content=learnmore

Last year brought major political shocks to the world: the election of Donald Trump; the rise of “fake news;” and the emergence of populist, anti-globalization movements in Britain, the Philippines and elsewhere. Many of these were fueled by the growing feeling among certain groups that they are being left out of economic opportunities.

The big question for 2017 is: Are these disruptions merely a speed bump for progress toward a more sustainable, equitable world, or will they signal a much larger retreat? Tiếp tục đọc “6 Environment and Development Stories to Watch in 2017”

It Can Power a Small Nation. But This Wind Farm in China Is Mostly Idle

Chuyện về ông già nghiên cứu điôxin bằng chim

Thứ Tư, ngày 30/12/2009

ThienNhien.Net – Mọi người biết đến ông là một trong những nhà khoa học hàng đầu Việt Nam về đa dạng sinh học và môi trường. Tiếng tăm của ông càng vươn xa với những giải thưởng danh giá quốc tế. Song, có một lĩnh vực đã gắn bó da diết với ông gần 40 năm nay, và công việc ấy đã trở thành một “thứ bùa định mệnh” khiến ông thể nào rời xa lĩnh vực môi trường, đó là nghiên cứu ảnh hưởng của chất độc hoá học chiến tranh.


Đến với môi trường nhờ diôxin

 Cuối năm 1970, đất nước còn chia đôi miền tại ranh giới là cây cầu Hiền Lương ở vĩ tuyến 17 vắt ngang con sông Bến Hải. Bấy giờ, ông phụ trách khoa Sinh của Trường Đại học Tổng hợp, nằm ở số 19 Lê Thánh Tông, Hà Nội. Tiếp tục đọc “Chuyện về ông già nghiên cứu điôxin bằng chim”

Vo Quy, Father of Environmental Conservation in Vietnam, Dies at 87

Prof. Vo Quy was a remarkable man, a much admired environmentalist, a popular TV host who made science accessible and entertaining.  He was a generous and caring human being whose twinkling eyes and modest good humor, and his integrity, positively influenced governments and party leaders, and several generations of Vietnamese citizens.  Dr. Quy introduced many foreigners to the rich diversity of Viet Nam’s flora and fauna and instilled in everyone a sense of personal responsibility for the preservation of this fragile environment. He was a determined but temperate leader in the struggle to understand the damage caused by Agent Orange and to seek justice for those affected by its consequences.

Chuck Searcy

New York Times

ASIA PACIFIC | OBITUARY

Vo Quy, Father of Environmental Conservation in Vietnam, Dies at 87

By MIKE IVES

Vo Quy, center, checking plant samples in central Vietnam in 1996. Dr. Quy was well known for his pioneering studies on Vietnam’s wildlife. Credit Kathy Wilhelm/Associated Press

HONG KONG — In the early 1960s, a young ornithologist successfully persuaded Vietnam’s top leaders, including its founding president, Ho Chi Minh, to designate a tract of land near the capital as the country’s first national park.

“They listened to this guy who goes out and watches birds,” said Pamela McElwee, an associate professor at Rutgers University who is an expert on Vietnam’s environmental history. “I think that’s a sign of how significant he was.”

Tiếp tục đọc “Vo Quy, Father of Environmental Conservation in Vietnam, Dies at 87”

Ổn định vùng người Mông di cư tại Điện Biên – 5 bài

  • Bài 1: Không thể để đồng bào mãi lầm đường và lạc niềm tin
  • Bài 2: Vỡ mộng trên đất khách
  • Bài 3: Trở về từ ranh giới của sự sống và cái chết
  • Bài 4: Huổi Khon – vết thương đã lành
  • Bài 5: Bồi đắp niềm tin lòng người

mclv_15a
Trẻ em người Mông ở bản Hua Sin. Ảnh: Bích Hằng

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Ổn định vùng người Mông di cư tại Điện Biên

29/11/2016 – 15:07 BP

Việc người Mông di cư vượt biên trái phép không phải là vấn đề mới, gần đây sự việc lại nóng lên và được nhận định là có thể gia tăng với tính chất phức tạp hơn. Đây là một thách thức lớn đối với lực lượng Biên phòng và các địa phương có vùng đồng bào Mông sinh sống. Chúng tôi đi dọc tuyến biên giới của tỉnh Điện Biên tìm lại hồ sơ về người Mông vượt biên di cư, chuyện chưa hề cũ.

Tiếp tục đọc “Ổn định vùng người Mông di cư tại Điện Biên – 5 bài”