"The mind is everything. What you think you become" ........... Buddha


"A creative man is motivated by the desire to achieve, not by the desire to beat others
" .......................... Ayn Rand

"Each one has to find his peace from within. And peace to be real must be unaffected by outside circumstances." ......... Mahatma Gandhi

Total Pageviews

Saturday, October 02, 2010

IN NEWS


Ramesh concerned over lack of forest guards
Jalpaiguri, (West Bengal): Environment minister Jairam Ramesh visited Banarhat in Jalpaiguri district of West Bengal where seven elephants were killed by a speeding goods train recently.
He termed the killing of seven elephants as a ghastly incident and expressed concern over the lack of recruitment of forest rangers.
"Well I have discussed this with forest officials. One of the problems has been the lack of recruitment at the local level at the forest guard level, forest ranger level. I am pleased to say that I have just been informed that fresh recruitment is going to be started this year in Bengal," said Ramesh……………………

'Sundarbans tigers may be the smallest'
Sat, Oct 2nd, 2010 8:31 pm BdST
Dhaka, Oct 2 (bdnews24.com) – The Sundarbans tigers may be the smallest in the world, due mainly to the small size of deer and other prey available, a new study says.
Wild Life Trust of Bangladesh (WTB) in a press release on Saturday said the Royal Bengal Tigers of the mangrove forest Sundarbans, one of the nine sub-species of the world's tigers, weigh an average of 76.7 kg, nearly half the weight of other wild Bengal tigers which average at 138.2 kg.This is also less than the average weight of tigers from any of the other eight sub-species, making the Sundarbans tiger probably the smallest in the world.
"The reasons for small size of Sundarbans tigers are not known, but the authors of the study suggest this could be related to the small size of deer available to tigers in the Sundarbans, compared to the larger deer and other prey available to tigers in other parts of the world." WTB says. Previously it was believed that the Sumatran tiger was the smallest, with an average weight of 86.7 kg. ……

Making CDM Forestry Projects Attractive for Communities 

Around the time Kyoto Protocol was being negotiated in 1997 there was a huge opposition, led by Greenpeace, against using the forest based carbon sequestration route to lower the carbon dioxide build up in the atmosphere for fears that raising forests for capturing carbon in developing countries would be so cheap most Annex I countries would not bother reducing greenhouse emissions from fossil fuel use. It ultimately did make it to the Protocol but with such hobbled feet that it has become nearly impossible to initiate a CDM forestry project. Today forestry projects form a bare 0.53% of the total projects registered by the CDM Executive Board with not a single temporary Certificates of Emission Reduction (CER) from any of these projects issued so far. And, to compound the matter still further, there is no demand for these temporary CERs in the forward markets. Which is not surprising because, of the two potential purchasers, Japan is more interested in the cheaper and permanent “hot air” credits from the former Communist bloc, and the European Union, under the influence of Greenpeace with its active, though minor, ............................................ http://igrec.in/making_cdm_forestry_projects_attractive_for_communties.html

1st regional NTCA office gets nod
Vijay Pinjarkar, TNN, Oct 1, 2010, 07.07am IST
NAGPUR: The Centre on Tuesday finally cleared the setting up of India's first regional office of the National Tiger Conservation Authority (NTCA) in Nagpur.
The proposal was cleared on Tuesday, and an official communication issued by Rajesh Gopal, NTCA member-secretary, to this effect was received by PCCF (wildlife) on Wednesday. NTCA is the statutory body under the ministry of environment & forests (MoEF) monitoring all tiger reserves in India. The NTCA has stated that the office at Nagpur will closely monitor all tiger reserves in Central India. There are 12 tigers reserves in Maharashtra, Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh…………………………………

When will the railways stop killing its mascot?
PRERNA SINGH BINDRA
Award-winning Conservation Journalist
SEVEN ELEPHANTS were brutally mowed down by a speeding train on 22 September when trying to save two of their young trapped on the Siliguri-Alipurduar track in North Bengal. Five died, mercifully, on the spot. For two others — one, perhaps the matriarch, who charged at the train in pain and anger — it was a slow, agonising end.Like in other such tragedies, including the one in June this year that killed a female, this time too, the railways shrugged off the blame by saying, “The accident occurred between two tea gardens, which is not a protected zone. There are no forests in the vicinity.”
Forget that this stretch of line cuts through the tropical forests of the eastern Himalayas, with tracts of protected areas fragmented by tea gardens. Or even about how the driver failed to see, and react, to the herd ahead in a flat expanse of land on a moonlit night. Let’s look at the larger picture instead.Consider the magnitude of the problem: Railways are among the top slayers of the elephant, with no less than 150 crushed by trains in India since 1987…………………………

The role of non-timber forest products in poverty reduction in India: prospects and problems 
Authors: Golam Rasul; Madhav Karki; Ram P. Sah
Abstract
The vast natural resources of India's forests, including non-timber forest products (NTFPs), such as medicinal and aromatic plants, leaves, fruits, seeds, resins, gums, bamboos, and canes, offer employment that provides up to half the income of about 25 per cent of the country's rural labour force. However, poor harvesting practices and over-exploitation in the face of increasing market demand are threatening the sustainability of these resources, and thus the livelihoods of forest-dependent tribal communities. This article analyses the role of NTFPs in livelihoods-improvement initiatives and considers recent initiatives intended to enhance their conservation and sustainable management. It recommends policies to optimise the potential of NTFPs, both to support rural livelihoods and to contribute to India's social, economic, and environmental well-being
Keywords: Policy; Institutions; Environment; Labour and livelihoods; South Asia

Tanzania Project First To Earn VCS Forest Credits
Date: 24-Sep-10  Country: SINGAPORE
Author: David Fogarty
A Tanzanian reforestation project has become the first forestry investment to be issued carbon offsets under an industry-backed standard that assures investors the emission reductions are credible and long-term.The Voluntary Carbon Standard said on Thursday the first batch of credits had been issued this week and placed in the VCS registry.
London-based The CarbonNeutral Company, which helps firms cut their carbon emissions, is marketing the credits.The project in the southern highlands of Tanzania involves converting degraded grassland into sustainably harvested eucalypt and pine forests that soak up carbon dioxide from the air as they grow, earning CO2 offsets.The forests cover 7,250 hectares (18,125 acres) in Uchindile district and 3,560 hectares at Mapanda district, the VCS and The CarbonNeutral Company said in a statement……………………………

‘Sukhna’s catchment not within purview of Punjab Forest dept’
Express News Service
Posted: Sep 28, 2010 at 0253 hrs IST
Chandigarh The Punjab government in response to an ongoing public interest litigation (PIL) demanding protection of Sukhna Lake from deterioration today submitted that “the Sukhna Lake and its catchment area including the area of Kansal does not fall under the purview of the Punjab Forest Department”.The reply has been filed by R C Nayyar, Principal Secretary, Forest and Wildlife Preservation, Punjab, Chandigarh. The state has further submitted that “the area mentioned in the petition is neither managed nor controlled by the Forest Department, Punjab. The Chief Conservator Soils, Punjab, has reported that the details of the catchment of Sukhna Lake mentioned in the petition does not pertain to the State of Punjab”. The PIL is a suo motu notice taken by the High Court pained over the deplorable condition of the lake…….

1 comment:

Free Softwers Download with Fullversion keys said...

I hope to see more news in your blog keep post latest updates.
Eenadu