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Daily Archives: 17/11/2011



Teste feito com um avião da Airbus utilizou um biocombustível especial que diminui a poluição


Aviões da Air France: o voo foi de Toulouse a Paris. (Fotografia: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images)

Paris – A companhia Air France e o fabricante aeronáutico Airbus realizaram nesta quinta-feira um voo comercial entre Toulouse e Paris movido a uma mistura de biocombustíveis que permitiu reduzir pela metade as emissões de dióxido de carbono (CO2).

O experimento foi apresentado como o voo com a menor emissão de gases poluentes do mundo. O trajeto foi feito por um Airbus A321 no qual metade do combustível foi obtido com azeites usados. Além disso, o peso de diversos equipamentos, como dos assentos e de materiais usados na cabine, foram reduzidos.

Além disso, aperfeiçoaram-se os procedimentos nos aeroportos de saída e chegada, nas operações de decolagem e aterrissagem e durante o voo, com o objetivo de economizar combustível.

Ao querosene foram acrescentados 50% de uma espécie de biocarburante elaborado por hidrotratamento. No final, a emissão de CO2 por passageiro e quilômetro ficou em 54 gramas, metade do consumido normalmente.

Para minimizar ainda mais o uso de combustível, a energia usada para a climatização em terra foi feita com geradores elétricos. Após pousar na pista do aeroporto, a aeronave desligou um de seus motores. Além disso, a busca durante todo o trajeto de uma velocidade ótima permitiu reduzir em 10 % o combustível empregado. Com as medidas, a companhia espera economizar 1.700 toneladas de combustível.

A Air France assinalou em comunicado que está realizando ‘uma política ambiciosa para melhorar a eficácia energética de seus aviões’. Nesse sentido, indicou que a idade média de sua frota é de 8,9 anos para as aeronaves de trajetos longos e de 9,5 anos para percursos menores.

Fonte: Exame / EFE
Original: http://bit.ly/mW5HJo


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In this image taken on August 7, 2010, marooned flood victims, including boy Mohammed Farhan, aged about 12, and Allah Dita, aged about 64, look to escape by grabbing onto the side bars of a hovering army helicopter which arrived to the village of Daya Chokha Gharbi to distribute cooked chick peas and rice to flood victims in Kot Adu located in southern Punjab’s Muzaffargarh district. (Photography: Adrees Latif / REUTERS)

It is more than a year since the devastating July and August 2010 floods in Pakistan that affected about 20 million people and killed an estimated 2,000. Many believe that the disaster was partially fuelled by global warming, and that there is a real danger that Pakistan, and the Indian subcontinent in general, could become the focus of much more regular catastrophic flooding.

Indeed, right now Pakistan is again experiencing massive flooding. The UN asserts that, already, more than 5.5 million people have been affected and almost 4300 are officially reported dead, 100 of them children.

Last year’s calamity, in particular, highlights the vulnerability of much of Asia to climate change, and has helped elevate this into one of the most important and pressing political and social issues in the region. Indeed, an increasingly prevailing view is that the impact of climate change could be worse in the region than all previous social, health and conflict disasters of the past.

In particular, there is growing recognition that global warming is dangerously linked to several significant threats, including not just natural disasters, but also energy, water, and food shortages as average rising temperatures reduce productivity and agricultural land is threatened by sea level rises and salinification of coastal areas.

Following the combination of last year’s Pakistani floods, and the exceptional heat waves in Russia, there is also now greater understanding in the region about the links between continental-scale weather events, and hence global risks to food availability. These linkages are likely to be exacerbated by adjustments in the patterns of atmosphere and ocean movements.

Reflecting this heightened concern, Asian prime ministers, legislators and business leaders are increasingly supporting new climate-related legislation, investments and research. They are also leveraging their growing influence at the United Nations to help secure a comprehensive, global warming deal.

This significant shift in Asian elite opinion has occurred despite the fact that it is now largely acknowledged within the region as unrealistic to expect total emissions from developed countries to be significantly reduced over the next few decades. Disappointment is often expressed, in particular, that the United States and Canada have no effective plans to follow European Union countries and Australia in introducing effective measures to make reductions.

There are numerous specific ways in which this “Asian consensus” on climate change is manifesting itself across the region.

First, low-lying islands and coastal areas. The great concern of these terrains – some of which are threatened by rising sea levels, combined with increasing frequency of the intense rainfall and the occasional typhoon and tsunami – is leading affected countries to play a very active role in international negotiations. Singapore has even instituted a climate change secretariat in its Prime Minister’s Office.

Moreover, there is considerable momentum to find new technical solutions. In Bangalore, for instance, companies are solving acute water shortages by hi-tech recycling and restoring depleted aquifers from the still plentiful monsoon rains.

Second, continental-scale Asian countries. Countries such as India and China, with dense centres of population and growing megacities, are thinking very seriously about responses to dangerous rises in temperature. In China, for instance, there has been a rise in temperature of two degrees Celsius since 1950, and the rise is anticipated to be greater than four degrees by 2100 if global emissions continue on predicted trends. To help prevent the looming problems associated with this, Beijing is harnessing new technologies to set ambitious targets for reducing carbon emissions per unit of energy supplied by 40-45 percent by 2020.

Within such continental-scale Asian economies, requirements for energy and food are increasing rapidly as standards of living grow. In India, these two requirements are competing with each other in some areas where large power stations, coal mining and biomass projects all take land from farmers, threatening food supplies and local political stability.

But this problem is being mitigated by clean energy systems, such as wind power and the use of desert areas for direct solar production. Such projects are attracting international investment and funds for innovation.

Third, forests. Forests in Asia have been of concern since the 1920s when the Indian Nobel laureate Rabindranath Tagore raised the alarm. Now the monitoring, conserving and responsible utilisation of forests is being regulated through national legislation, combined with the international funding arrangements of a UN programme to cut emissions resulting from deforestation in developing countries.

Politicians in the region increasingly realise that deforestation has devastating short-term impacts on rainfall reduction and lowering agricultural productivity, and also on health because of air pollution. These impacts can cross land and sea boundaries. Fortunately, areas of forest in India and China are now increasing again, although dense forest areas are still threatened in other Asian countries.

As encouraging as many of these initiatives are, the scale of the challenge means that debate in Asia is also turning to whether there are acceptable low-risk geo-engineering solutions to climate change. In a recent Indo-German experiment in the Indian Ocean, iron particles were released to increase absorption of carbon dioxide, but so far without success. Teams are also planning experiments to release droplets high in the stratosphere to cut solar radiation.

The International Maritime Organisation is meeting to consider a trial on the release of iron particles. This brings to the fore the question of which international organisations should accept responsibility for regulating geo-engineering. Indeed, many in Asia already believe that wholly new approaches to international governance will be needed to obtain a consensus in the region to tackle these unprecedented challenges.

Author: Lord Julian Hunt and Professor J. Srinivasan. The opinions expressed are their own.
Source: Reuters
Original: http://reut.rs/ofZ2wr

Lord Julian Hunt is Vice Chair of Global Legislators Organisation for a Balanced Environment, and visiting professor at Delft University of Technology and the Malaysian Commonwealth Studies Centre, Cambridge. Professor J. Srinivasan is chairman of the Divecha Centre for Climate Change at the Indian Institute of Science, Bangalore.


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Haiti é o mais suscetível, enquanto a Islândia é país com melhores condições de enfrentar o problema


Haitianos desesperados recorrem a bolos feitos de argila, sal e gordura – um tradicional suplemento à dieta das mulheres grávidas. (Fotografia: Ariana Cubillos)

Cidades localizadas na África e na Ásia estão entre as mais vulneráveis a problemas relacionados a mudanças climáticas como, por exemplo, o aumento do nível do mar e conseqüentes inundações. Essa foi a conclusão do estudo “Climate Change Vulnerability Index 2012”, da empresa britânica Maplecroft.

De acordo o relatório, a nação que mais precisa se preocupar com desastres provenientes das mudanças no clima é o Haiti, enquanto a Islândia é o país em melhores condições para enfrentar esse tipo de complicação.Na avaliação geral, o Brasil está classificado como nível médio de vulnerabilildade.

Algumas cidades tiveram uma atenção especial no estudo da Maplecroft. Das 20 cidades com índices de crescimento populacional mais rápido do mundo, seis figuram na lista dos municípios classificados em situação de “risco extremo”: Calcutá (Índia), Jacarta (Indonésia), Dhaka e Chitakonog (Bangladesh), Addis Ababa (Etiópia) e Manila (Filipinas). Para se ter uma idéia, essa última terá cerca de 2,2 milhões de novos habitantes acrescentados à sua população atual nos próximos 10 anos.

A empresa incluiu no estaudo quase 200 países em termos de vulnerabilidade às mudanças no clima. Os países receberam uma nota entre quatro conceitos: risco baixo, médio, alto e extremo. Veja o mapa mundial de vulnerabilidade elaborado pela Maplecroft.

A pesquisa analisou a exposição da população a possíveis desastres naturais. Para chegar a uma conclusão o estudo levou em consideração itens como densidade demográfica, índice de desenvolvimento, disponibilidade de recursos naturais, grau de dependência da agricultura e a existência de conflitos na região.

Para os responsáveis pela a análise, mudanças climáticas e o aumento populacional são os dois maiores desafios que o mundo vai enfrentar no próximo século. O estudo aponta que as regiões com rápido aumento populacional são as mais vulneráveis a desastres naturais, principalmente aos relacionados ao aumento do nível do mar.

Segundo os pesquisadores o crescimento populacional aliado à baixa efetividade do governo, corrupção, pobreza e outros fatores sócio-econômicos aumenta os riscos não só para a população, mas também para a economia mundial.

Autor: Guilherme Lorenzetti
Fonte: National Geographic Brasil Online
Original: http://bit.ly/rCq9Tn


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Largest producer of energy efficient lightbulbs announces move – but may apparently still produce incandescents for export


China will ban imports and sales of 100 watt and higher incandescent bulbs from 1 October 2012. (Photography: Ruben Sprich / Reuters)

The lights are going out for incandescent bulbs, as China pledges to replace the 1 billion it uses annually with more energy efficient models within five years.

Beijing’s move is a major step in efforts to improve lighting efficiency and reduce greenhouse gas emissions. Lighting accounts for 19% of electricity use worldwide, according to a 2007 estimate from the International Energy Agency, a figure that could drop to 7% if the rest of the world followed China’s lead, the Global Environment Facility fund said.

The decision by the world’s second largest economy to phase out incandescents follows in the footsteps of Australia, the European Union, Brazil and others.

But according to the Global Environment Facility, incandescents still make up 50-70% of worldwide sales and China’s move forms a striking contrast to the US government’s backsliding on the issue. This summer Republicans drove a bill through the House of Representatives stripping all funding for government enforcement of improved lighting efficiency standards, which come into force next year.

It is unclear whether China will totally phase out production of incandescents. A report from state news agency Xinhua said that “imports and sales” would be banned – seemingly implying that exports would still be allowed.

Campaigners hope China’s plan will nonetheless encourage producers – who make 3.85 billion incandescent bulbs a year, an estimated 70% of the world’s supply – to shift towards other products, in particular CFLs (compact fluorescent lamps) and LEDs. CFLs use around 75% less energy to produce an equivalent amount of light and last much longer.

The country has already become the largest producer of energy-efficient light bulbs, thanks in large part to sizable grants from international environmental agencies.

Experts predict that the shift in demand will also cut the cost of CFLs and increase the cost of incandescents globally.

Imports and sales of 100 watt and higher incandescent bulbs will be banned from October next year, Xie Ji, an official at the country’s top economic planning body said, while those of 60 watts and above will be banned from October 2014.

The senior official added that incandescents of 15 watts or higher would be banned from 2016 if the scheme was a success.

The plan showed China’s determination to save energy, cut costs and curb climate change, he went on, and would have a “significant impact” on global use.

Xie, who is deputy director of the environmental protection department with the National Development and Reform Commission, added that lighting accounts for 12% of China’s total electricity use. The NDRC has estimated that the switch will save 48 billion kilowatt hours of power per year and reduce emissions of carbon dioxide by 48 million tonnes annually. China emitted 7,710 million tonnes of carbon dioxide in 2009.

Overall, China has pledged to cut energy consumption per unit of GDP by 16% and cut carbon emissions by 17% in the five years to 2015.

Yang Fuqiang, the senior advisor on climate change and energy at the US-based Natural Resources Defence Council, said the amount of electricity used by lighting in China at the moment was two or three times the generating capacity of the massive Three Gorges dam.

He added that while exports would still be legal, the plan should help companies produce more energy efficient bulbs, not least because China already had strong research and development and production capacity for energy efficient lighting.

The Global Environment Facility fund, which has invested millions of dollars in China to encourage the phase-out, says that moving to efficient lighting is one of the simplest ways for countries to cut carbon emissions.

Christophe Bahuet, the deputy country director of the United Nations Development Programme, said: “I think what’s important for us is that China is joining an international trend. It also sends a signal that will inspire others.”

But he cautioned that implementation would be key, warning: “It is a roadmap, but a lot will have to be done at provincial and local level to help explain why people should go for these plans.”

Wang Jinsui, the president of the China Illuminating Engineering Society, told the China Daily newspaper earlier this year that it would take producers time to switch. He added that the government should consider subsidies because many families would not be able to afford the more expensive energy-efficient bulbs.

Liu Shengping, the secretary general of the China Association of Lighting Industry, told the newspaper that it was “unrealistic” to require energy efficient lights were used everywhere.

“As long as the demand exists, Chinese manufacturers can hardly pull the plug on the production line,” he said.

Author: Tania Branigan additional research by Han Cheng
Source: The Guardian
Original: http://bit.ly/t8pE8f


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(Fotografia: Divulgação)

São Paulo – Dê uma espiada no carro ao lado. Bonito, não? Pois será assim o primeiro automóvel com propulsão elétrica da centenária marca de luxo Cadillac. A produção dessa máquina verde de contornos requintados deverá começar entre 2013 e 2014, de acordo com a General Motors (GM).

O Caddilac ELR, como foi chamado, irá utilizar um sistema de propulsão composto por uma bateria de íons de lítio que alimenta o motor elétrico além de um motor de quatro cilindros a gasolina. Aqui, a fonte de locomoção primária é a energia elétrica, com o motor a gasolina entrando em funcionamento apenas para carregar a bateria.

A autonomia do veículo é de 500Km, mesmo nível de outros modelos da fabricante GM, como o Chevrolet Volt e o Opel Ampera. Trata-se de um desempenho invejável se comparado com outros modelos “verdes” propostos pelo mercado de luxo, como o esportivo Fisker Karma elétrico ou o Phantom Experimental Electric, primeiro protótipo da ultra-luxuosa Rolls Royce.

Autor: Vanessa Barbosa
Fonte: Exame
Original: http://bit.ly/nwIoG6


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Hold the frappuccino and put the latte back down – you may need to start weening yourself off them. In the not too distant future, climate change looks set to threaten the world’s coffee and cocoa supplies.

For caffeine and chocolate addicts, it could mean that in a matter of decades their daily indulgence could become a luxury they can no longer afford.

Starbucks, the global coffee giant, is so concerned about its crop that it will be briefing Congress in Washington on Friday. So far, its head of sustainability, Jim Hanna, has been canvassing the Obama administration to act on climate change with little success.

Hanna told the Guardian his frustrations that if conditions continue as they are, there is “a potentially significant risk to our supply chain, which is the Arabica coffee bean”.

Even now, Starbucks’s farmers, who are mainly in Central America, are already feeling the effects of a changing climate, with severe hurricanes and more resistant bugs reducing crop yields, he said.

Cocoa beans are in just as much peril as their coffee bean counterparts. Over half of the world’s chocolate comes from Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire. According to a study by scientists at the International Center For Tropical Agriculture (CIAT), rising temperatures in these countries could send chocolate prices soaring, as supply will surely dwindle.

The cocoa report predicts a one-degree Celsius temperature rise by 2030. This increase alone would be enough to inhibit the growth of cocoa pods in West Africa. The region’s dry season is also predicted to become more intense, to the point that it will disrupt plant growth.

Scientific research may be able to find a way to develop heat-tolerant cocoa plant varieties, though investment has not yet been forth-coming.

It is not just western consumers that will be detrimentally affected. CIAT’s Dr Peter Laderach explains that in writing his report he was highlighting the effect it will have on local farmers.

He explained that: “Many of these farmers use their cocoa trees like ATM machines. They pick some pods and sell them to quickly raise cash. The trees play an absolutely critical role”.

Author: Olivia Williams
Source: The Huffington Post UK
Original: http://huff.to/qbrygE


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A queima de carvão é uma grande fonte do carbono emitido. (Fotografia: Tim Wimborne / Reuters (arquivo))

O carbono emitido a nível mundial em 2010 foi superior aos piores cenários que o Painel Internacional das Alterações Climáticas (IPCC, sigla em inglês) fez em 2007, defende a Agência da Energia dos Estados Unidos.

Segundo os dados do relatório, anunciados num notícia da AP publicada pelo jornal The Guardian, em 2010 o mundo emitiu mais 512 milhões de toneladas de carbono para o ar do que em 2009, um aumento de seis por cento.

“Quanto mais falamos sobre a necessidade de controlar as emissões, mais elas crescem”, disse John Reilly, co-director do Programa Conjunto do MIT sobre a Ciência e Política das Alterações Climáticas, citado pelo Guardian.

Os grandes responsáveis pelo aumento de emissões foram os Estados Unidos, a China e a Índia. Os dois últimos países são grandes consumidores de carbono, a queima deste combustível fóssil é a maior fonte a nível mundial de CO2, e representou um aumento de 2009 para 2010 de oito por cento.

“É um grande salto”, disse por sua vez Tom Boden, director do Centro de Análise e Informação do Dióxido de carbono que faz parte do departamento de energia, do Laboratório Nacional de Oak Ridge. “Do ponto de vista das emissões, a crise financeira mundial parece ter terminado.”

Segundo o responsável, os resultados de 2010 são superiores às expectativas do relatório do IPCC publicado em 2007, em relação às emissões de dióxido de carbono.

O mesmo relatório dizia que o aumento de temperaturas no final do século, devido ao efeito de estufa, seria entre 2,4 e 6,4 graus com uma média de quatro graus. Mas John Reilly explica que as estimativas extremas do IPCC correspondiam somente às estimativas médias do MIT.

Fonte: Ecosfera – Público
Original: http://bit.ly/vZf7Rc


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A salmon farm in the Broughton Archipelago in British Columbia. (Photography: Bayne Stanley / The New York Times)

The detection of infectious salmon anemia, a lethal virus, in two juvenile wild sockeye salmon in British Columbia has reinvigorated a long-running debate about the sustainability of the aquaculture industry, particularly salmon farms.

Worldwide, the majority of salmon farms are situated in the ocean, with a net the only barrier between the farmed fish and the wild ones. Such pens produce thousands of tons of fish each year, said Gary Marty, a fish pathologist for the Ministry of Agriculture in British Columbia.

Some scientists and environmentalists are calling for moving the salmon farms to inland freshwater pens to protect the ocean environment.

The two wild sockeye with the virus were discovered along the province’s central coast. Some biologists suspect that the ailment could have spread from the saltwater salmon farms.

“This form of fish farming has lots of opponents,” said Daniel Pauly, a fisheries biologist at the University of British Columbia.

Glen Spain, the Northwest regional director for the Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations, suggests that onshore farms would diminish the need for “these massive undertakings in the wild.”

For now, though, there is no indication that moving farms onto land is a viable plan. “That’s probably not a standard thing we’d do, moving onto land,” Dr. Marty said. For starters, such a move would cost $1 billion to $2 billion, he said.

Although moving the farms would protect wild fish, diseases can still develop inland, Rosamond Naylor, the director of the Center on Food Security and the Environment at Stanford University, noted. She also points out that an inland system is more costly to operate and consumes more energy as clean water is replenished.

“I don’t think you can reach the same scale of production without increasing consumer prices quite a bit,” she said.

Still, open-water salmon farming has numerous negative environmental consequences because so many factors are harder to manage, Dr. Pauly said. Infectious salmon anemia is only the meltdown point amid a host of other problems, he added.

Sea lice, the parasitic crustaceans that feed on live fish tissues, are prolific in the ocean farms and can jump from farmed fish to wild ones that pass by the enclosures. Chemicals are used to treat the lice, and the parasites may quickly develop resistance to them. Sediment on the bottom of aquaculture ponds creates a mini dead zone.

High levels of antibiotics are sometimes used to treat bacterial diseases, and farmed fish that escape may then interbreed with wild fish and compete with them for resources. An estimated 3 to 5 percent of all farmed fish escape their pens, usually through events like storms or during common procedures like cleaning pens or transporting the fish

It’s also easier for companies to avoid regulations when operating out in the ocean, said Mr. Spain of the fishermen’s federation, “and that’s a recipe for disaster.”

Norwegian-owned Marine Harvest, the world’s largest salmon farming company, which owns 55 percent of the salmon farms in British Columbia, has been charged with four counts of illegal possession of wild Canadian salmon and herring.

In an e-mail, Ian Roberts, a spokesman for Marine Harvest, confirmed that the company would plead guilty to the charges.

Since 2001, the company has been fined more than $125,500 in British Columbia, Scotland, and Chile for other violations including pollution, breaching water-use licenses and lax health and safety standards for workers.

Some experts advocate a total ban on salmon farming, on land or at sea.

“Aquaculture of carnivores is hopeless and extremely wasteful,” said Dr. Pauly, who supports such a ban. The farmed fish are fed with species that people could consume, he said, so it ends up contributing to human demand for the wild stocks of other species.

For every pound of salmon produced, five pounds of wild fish are needed, usually in the form of anchovies, sardines, or mackerel. “It’s like feeding tigers a ton of livestock to get tiger meat,” says Alex Muñoz Wilson, the vice president in Chile for the nonprofit ocean conservation group Oceana.

Many of these feed fish are species that people could eat, Mr. Muñoz said. A decade ago in Chile, the annual mackerel catch was around four million tons, he said. Today, only about 200,000 tons are harvested annually, he said, although the salmon farms are only partly responsible.

“I think in the long run, salmon aquaculture creates more problems than benefits,” Mr. Muñoz said.

On the other hand, said Ray Hilborn, a professor of aquatic and fishery sciences at the University of Washington, salmon farming “looks pretty good compared to livestock farming.”

About 30 to 40 million tons of fish are caught each year that are unmarketable for humans, he says, and much of that surplus now goes to salmon. He says that salmon aquaculture takes up much less space than livestock farms: Norway’s annual 500,000 tons of salmon production covers an area about the size of the Oslo airport, he noted.

“You can’t look at the environmental impacts of salmon farming in isolation,” Dr. Hilborn said.

Author: Rachel Nuwer
Source: The New York Times
Original: http://bit.ly/rBzGg0


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