Sunday, 7 June 2015

Africa’s Tanzania loses 60 per cent elephants to poaching

Africa’s Tanzania loses 60 per cent elephants to poaching

Author(s): DTE Staff 

Neighbour Mozambique had recently revealed that it lost nearly half of its elephant population in five years
Photo: UNPhoto: UN
Tanzania has lost a “catastrophic” 60 per cent of its elephants in just five years. The numbers have plummeted from an estimated 109,051 in 2009 to 43,330 in 2014, says the latest report released by international wildlife conservation non- profit TRAFFIC.  
“The government’s figures show Tanzania lost tens of thousands of elephants over the past decade,” said Steven Broad, TRAFFIC’s executive director. “It is incredible that poaching on such an industrial scale has not been identified and addressed before now.”
More shocking numbers by the non-profit reveal that since 2009, at least 45 tonnes of ivory has flowed from Tanzania to international MARKET Sin Asia.
While announcing these numbers, Tanzanian Minister for Natural Resources and Tourism Lazaro Nyalandu on Monday also announced a slew of measures to protect the country’s elephants.

A few days earlier, Tanzania’s neighbour Mozambique, in collaboration with US-based Wildlife Conservation Society, had revealed that the elephant numbers in the country have declined from 20,000 to 10,300 due to illegal wildlifeTRADE. This means the country lost nearly 50 per cent of its elephant population in this period.
‘Africa may have no elephants in a few decades’
A recent study published in journal PNAS had warned that illegal killing for ivory was driving global decline in African elephants.   An estimated 100,000 elephants (Loxodonta Africana) were killed by poachers across Africa between 2010 and 2012, said the study that was led by George Wittemyer, professor in the Department of Fish, Wildlife and Conservation Biology at Colorado State University's Warner College of Natural Resources. The study used data that was compiled under a programme by conservation non-profit Convention on InternationalTRADE in Endangered Species (CITES). "The study confirms that elephant populations in eastern and southern Africa were in good shape until 2008, but then started to decline. Now, about 75 per cent of the populations across the continent are shrinking," it further added.

‘You have to support conservation charities’
Meanwhile, British broadcaster and naturalist David Attenborough has warned that rhinos and elephants will become extinct in Africa in the next decade if consolidated charity and conservation efforts are not undertaken.  “I’m not going to say we don’t care about protecting rhinos or elephants or African megafauna. If you said ‘yes, they’re all going to die within the next 10 years’ you would stop trying to protect them and they would die within the next 10 years,” he added

Government tightens noose around instant noodles brands

Government tightens noose around instant noodles brands


With three more states banning Maggi, Nestle India decides to withdraw its popular instant noodles packets from the Indian MARKET
The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India has directed states to test all popular instant noodles brands <Credit: Devika/Flickr)The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India has directed states to test all popular instant noodles brands <Credit: Devika/Flickr)
The Food Safety and Standards Authority of India (FSSAI) has directed states to test all instant noodles brands available in theMARKET after Maggi noodles were found to contain excess lead and monosodium glutamate (MSG).
The Delhi government recently banned the sale of Maggi across stores after 10 of 13 packets showed the presence of MSG and excess amount of lead (17 parts per million). The popular brand can only make a comeback after tests confirm the absence of MSG and lead content not beyond the permissible limit of 2.5 ppm.
Earlier, the Food Safety and Drug Administration (FDA) of the Uttar Pradesh government had also filed a case against Nestle India after excess amount of lead was found in Maggi packets at a retail store in Barabanki. Following this, it filed a case against Nestle in a local court.
“States have been requested to submit test reports. We will take action based on these reports. The process may take two to three days,” Y S Malik, FSSAI chief executive officer, said.
Meanwhile, in a press release, Nestle India said that it had decided to withdraw all Maggi packets from theMARKET. Information about ingredients printed on Maggi packets does not declare the presence of MSG, the over-consumption of which is considered dangerous by the World Health Organization (WHO).
Maggi faces heat
After Kerala declared a temporary ban on Maggi sale, Jammu and Kashmir, Uttarakhand and Gujarat have also followed suit.
Delhi-based businessman R P S Kohli has floated an online petition on the website, change.org, where he has appealed to Nestle chief executive officer (CEO) Paul Bulcke to recall Maggi from the IndianMARKET. The plea has attracted over 27,000 signatures.
Delhi-based non-profit Centre for Science and Environment’s 2012 study on Maggi noodles had found 4.2 gram of salt per 100 gram of Maggi noodles. The recommended daily intake of salt is 6 gram.
The India Medical Association (IMA) has also written to the Union Ministry of Health and Family Welfare, urging the government to test Maggi samples and suspend its sale.
Maggi still available in Delhi
Though the Delhi government was quick to respond to the Maggi controversy by banning its sale in city stores,CONSUMERS REPORTthat the popular noodles are still available in some places.
Rupela Mitra, a student, walked into a South Delhi departmental store and asked for a packet of Maggi, a day after it was banned in Delhi.
“The shopkeeper just stared at me. Despite the ban, he gave me the packet. I love Maggi, but the reaction of the people there was just unbelievable,” she said.

Increased typhoon intensity linked to ocean warming

Increased typhoon intensity linked to ocean warming


Wei Mei, University of California, San Diego
This article is part of The Conversation’s series this month on hurricanes. You can read the rest of the series here.
More like these? Typhoon Haiyan in 2013. NASAMore like these? Typhoon Haiyan in 2013 (Source: NASA)
Every year, typhoons over the western North Pacific – the equivalent to hurricanes in the North Atlantic – cause considerable damage in East and Southeast Asia.
Super Typhoon Haiyan of 2013, one of the strongest ocean storms ever recorded, devastated large portions of the Philippines and killed at least6,300 people. It set records for the strongest storm at landfall and for the highest sustained wind speed over one minute, hitting 315 kilometers (194 miles) per hour when it reached the province of Eastern Samar.
The situation may get even worse.
Our new study of what controls the peak intensity of typhoons, published in the journal Science Advances, suggests that under climate change, storms like Haiyan could get even stronger and more common by the end of this century.

Disentangling factors in typhoon peak intensity

The lifetime peak intensity of a typhoon is the maximum intensity the storm reaches during its entire lifetime. It results from an accumulation of intensification, which is equivalent to speed being an accumulation of acceleration.
To better understand the variability and changes in typhoon peak intensity, we employed a novel approach by decomposing the peak intensity (akin to speed) into two components: intensification rate (akin to acceleration) and intensification duration (akin to time). These two components vary independently from each other from one year to another. We then separately explored the climate conditions that were most strongly associated with the year-to-year variations in these two components.
We examined various atmospheric and oceanic variables that might influence the rate of cyclone intensification.
We looked at atmospheric pressure, vertical wind shear, or the change in wind speed in one direction, and vorticity, or the spin of the atmosphere. Surprisingly, we found that compared to those factors, ocean temperature most strongly correlated to the rate of cyclone intensification.
Specifically, how strongly and quickly a cyclone can grow depends on two oceanic factors: pre-storm sea surface temperature and the difference in temperature between the surface and subsurface.
A warmer sea surface generally provides more energy for storm development and thus favors higher intensification rates.
A large change in temperature from the surface to subsurface (ie, cooling with depth), however, can disrupt this flow of energy. That’s because strong winds drive turbulence in the upper ocean, which brings cold water up from below and cools the sea surface. Therefore, a smaller difference between surface and subsurface ocean temperature favors higher intensification rates.
On the other hand, the variations in the duration of typhoon intensification can be connected to sea surface temperatures associated with the naturally occurring phenomena known as El Nino-Southern Oscillation/Pacific Decadal Oscillation (ENSO/PDO). This is because in a positive phase of ENSO/PDO, warmer-than-normal sea surface temperatures over the central equatorial Pacific produce favorable atmospheric conditions for cyclone genesis near the equator and dateline. This allows developing typhoons to grow for a longer period of time over the warm water before reaching land or cold water.
In sum, our analyses reveal that the upper-ocean temperatures over the low-latitude western North Pacific influence typhoon intensification rates, and that sea surface temperatures over the central equatorial Pacific influence typhoon intensification duration.
We then quantified the relationships between typhoon peak intensity and these identified climatic factors – that is, local upper ocean temperatures and ENSO/PDO indices.
We concluded that the strong rise in typhoon peak intensity over the past 35 years or so (about five meters per second; equivalent to half a category in typhoon strength) can be mostly attributed to unusual local upper-ocean warming rates.

Projecting typhoon peak intensity in a warming climate

We analyzed the ocean temperature changes simulated by models from the fifth phase of the Coupled Model Intercomparison Project (CMIP5), a model for studying interactions between ocean and the atmosphere.
We found that by year 2100, the temperature of the upper ocean will be more than 1.6 degrees Celsius higher than the baseline average of the 50-year period from 1955-2005 even under a moderate future scenario of greenhouse gas emissions.
The continued ocean warming provides more “fuel” for storm intensification. Using the statistical relationships built from observations, we projected that the intensity of typhoons in the western North Pacific will increase as much as 14% – nearly the equivalent to an increase of one category – by century’s end.
The Conversation
Wei Mei is Postdoctoral Scholar at Scripps Institution of Oceanography atUniversity of California, San Diego.
This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

IMD forecasts deficient monsoon for 2015, drought fears grow

IMD forecasts deficient monsoon for 2015, drought fears grow


Monsoon expected over Kerala by June 5, late by at least a week
Representative picture by WikimediaRepresentative picture by Wikimedia
India is likely to get deficient rainfall in 2015, according to a latest forecast released on Tuesday by the India Meteorological Department (IMD). If the forecast comes true, this will be the second year in a row which will witness low rainfall.
According to the forecast, the country as a whole will receive only 88 per cent of the Long Period Average (LPA) of precipitation from June to September. While the northwest region will be worst affected with only 85 per cent of LPA, central India will get 90 per cent of LPA, southern peninsula 92 per cent and the northeast will receive 90 per cent.
Deficient rainfall is defined as 90 per cent or less LPA which is the average precipitation of the past 50 years. Thus, all regions except southern India, will receive scanty rainfall.
In an earlier forecast made in April, the IMD had predicted 93 per cent rainfall. “It is unfortunate that the revised forecast predicts even lower rains than before. The government is holding discussions to prepare for relief to the people,” said Union Minister for Earth Sciences Harsh Vardhan. He added that he wished that the forecast was wrong.
A high probability of El Nino in the Pacific Ocean is likely to impact the southwest monsoon. IMD says there is a well-established El Nino this year. According to Food and Agriculture Organization, there is 80 to 90 per cent probability that it will continue until the end of this year. 
IMD has also predicted that monsoon will reach Kerala on June 5. It usually reaches the southern state by the end of May.

CSE warns no one is safe from deadly ozone pollution

CSE warns no one is safe from deadly ozone pollution

Author(s): DTE Staff 

Civil Lines, Lutyens’ Delhi and hospitals are high risk zones, says latest CSE analysis
image
Delhi has witnessed significant ozone build-up this summer, which is adding to the public health risk, shows a latest analysis done by Delhi-based non-profit Centre for Science and Environment (CSE). Analysis of real time air quality data available from the key monitoring locations of Delhi Pollution Control Committee (DPCC) for the period April and May 2015 shows that the neighbourhoods of the rich and the powerful are highly vulnerable to deadly ozone pollution.
The ozone level in Civil Lines, where Delhi chief minister Arvind Kejriwal resides, is more than twice the standards and falls in the “poor” category of the National Air Quality Index (NAQI). 
“Heat  waves and sunshine have increased the frequency of days with unhealthy levels of ozone with serious public health consequences. This could have been worse this summer if intermittent rains had not cooled down the weather occasionally,” says the non-profit. 
Ground-level ozone is not directly emitted by any source. This is formed when oxides of nitrogen (NOX) and a range of volatile gases - primarily from vehicles and other sources - are exposed to each other in sunlight. Warm and stagnant air increases the formation of ozone. Ozone is extremely hazardous for human health. All neighbourhoods in Delhi – rich and poor – are at risk. 
According to Anumita Roychowdhury, executive director, research and advocacy and head of CSE’s air pollution programme, “The high ozone level has made the cocktail of toxic pollutants deadly. Without a time-bound implementation strategy and preventive action, this can deepen into a serious public health crisis. It will spare neither the rich nor the poor.” 
What has CSE found?
CSE has analysed ozone data from the automatic monitoring stations of the DPCC, located in R K Puram, Civil Lines, Mandir Marg and Punjabi Bagh - all residential areas - during the summer months of April and May 2015. This has exposed worrying trends in the city. To bridge the gap in official data for Lutyens’ Delhi and sensitive areas like hospitals, CSE used its own potable ozone monitoring machine to carry out limited monitoring in Lodi Estate in Lutyens’ Delhi and in the vicinity of the All India Institute of Medical Sciences. 
Civil Lines, where the chief minister stays, is an ozone hotspot:
According to the non-profit, Civil Lines has fared the worst in terms of number of days exceeding the standard for ozone. The eight-hourly average here peaked to 250 microgram/cubic metre – 2.5 times the standard. While in April, 92 per cent of the days exceeded the standards, in May it was as high as 97 per cent: nearly every day, the levels exceeded the standards. As per the NAQI classification, the poorly polluted days rose from 22.7 per cent in April to 41 per cent in May -- almost twice the number. The percentage of days classified as worse than poor rose from 4.5 per cent in April to 27.58 per cent in May. 
Rapid build-up of ozone pollution in summer:
While ozone levels have increased steadily with the onset of summer, it doubled up very quickly in most locations as soon as the heat wave hit Delhi in the first week of May. On several occasions and at several locations, very high peak levels have been noted, close to 2.5 to three times the standards. Says Roychowdhury: “This is of serious concern as even short duration exposure to high ozone levels can cause great harm. This is one of the reasons why ozone standards are set for an eight hours average as well as a one-hour average.” 
CSE’s own monitoring in Lodi Estate in Lutyens’ Delhi as well as the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) has brought out the vulnerability of these areas. During the day, the peak one-hourly averages frequently crossed the standards at Lodi Estate. 
Near AIIMS, one of the nation’s premier medical facilities, the peak one-hour average has been recorded at 266 microgram/cubic metre between 12:00 noon and 1:00 pm. CSE researchers say the DPCC should carry out regular monitoring in sensitive areas as well as in Lutyens’ Delhi. Lack of air pollution data in this area breeds complacency among the rich and the powerful. 
The months of April and May had several rainy days that reduced the ozone levels. But whenever a heat wave lashed the city, the ozone build-up has been very rapid. For instance, on May 13 this year, when it was raining the levels had plummeted to 13 microgram/cubic metre. But within two weeks, as the heat wave started to build up in the city, the levels shot up by 20 times. The city cannot depend on the rain gods for clean-up. It requires stringent action to reduce toxic gases at the source. 
Why should we worry about ozone?
Ozone is an extremely harmful gas: just a few hours of exposure to it can trigger serious health problems. Ozone is particularly harmful for outdoor activities. This can have immediate health impacts, especially among those who are already suffering from respiratory and asthmatic problems – this is even for short duration exposure. Ozone worsens symptoms of asthma, leads to lung function impairment and damages lung tissues. Chest pain, coughing, nausea, headaches and chest congestion are common symptoms. It can even worsen heart disease, bronchitis and emphysema. It increases emergency hospital visits and admissions related to respiratory diseases.
Scientists inform that ozone is a powerful oxidiser, which means it can damage cells in a process akin to rusting. Children and the elderly are at special risk. There is a strong association between ozone and daily premature death counts, says CSE. Those with pre-existing diseases and lung diseases are at serious risk. Growing concentrations of nitrogen oxide and volatile organic compounds from combustion sources, especially from the explosive increase in diesel vehicles, is adding to the deadly recipe of ozone in hot and extreme climate.
What do other governments do?
Ozone is included in the daily smog and health alert programmes in countries such as Mexico, the US, China, among others. In Mexico City, the elderly, children and those suffering from respiratory and cardiac problems are advised to stay indoors when levels of ozone go up. The US-based National Research Council, part of the National Academies of Science, has recommended that local health authorities should keep the harmful effects of ozone in mind when advising people on polluted days. The US is now tightening the ozone standards. 
A study by the University of Southern California and reported in Lancet, has found that in high-ozone areas the relative risk of developing asthma in children playing three or more sports was more compared to children playing no sports. Outdoor heavy exercise is not recommended as with every breath, one breathes in more pollutants -- athletes take in 10 to 20 times as much air, and thus pollutants, as sedentary people do. Hence, they are more at risk.
Need urgent action
Delhi needs much higher degree of health protection for all and especially the high risk groups, including the elderly, children, outdoor workers and people with asthma and lung disease. Cost of inaction can be very high, says Roychowdhury. The Delhi government must have its implementation strategy for priority measures in place before next winter: 

Measures suggested by CSE
  • Delhi government must implement daily health alert and pollution emergency action
    Inform the sensitive population (children, elderly and those suffering from respiratory and cardiac problems) about the high daily levels and enforce emergency pollution control measures such as reducing traffic volume, allowing only clean fuel and vehicles, control other polluting activities
  • Need urgent national action to leapfrog vehicle technology and fuel quality and control dieselisation
    Introduce Bharat Stage IV nation-wide by the end of 2015 and leapfrog to Euro VI by 2020. Only Euro VI standards can resolve the problem of NOx and particulate matter together from diesel vehicles
  • Need time bound implementation strategy to scale up public transport, walking and cycling to reduce vehicles usage and numbers Reduce numbers of vehicles and traffic volumes.
     
  • Implement source-wise action plan across the NCR region
 

40 per cent of Europe’s sharks and rays face extinction risk: IUCN

40 per cent of Europe’s sharks and rays face extinction risk: IUCN

Author(s): DTE Staff 

Conservation body’s newly released ‘Red List’ says 7.5 per cent of continent’s marine species are at risk of extinction
imageThe Angel shark has been declared locally extinct in the North Sea and also from large areas of the northern Mediterranean Sea (Pic Courtesy: Tony Gilbert/IUCN)
The International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) on Wednesday published the latest edition of its authoritative ‘Red List’ on Europe’s marine species. The data reveals that 7.5 per cent of the continent’s 1,220 marine species are at risk of extinction and among them are 40 per cent of Europe’s sharks and rays.
According to an article in the British daily, The Guardian, the IUCN report identified overfishing as the primary cause of the decline in marine biodiversity, followed closely by bycatches—accidental fish kills—coastal development, and pollution.
Among the shark species affected the most are blue sharks and Angel sharks. Bycatches have pushed blue sharks onto the near-threatened list, and Angel sharks to the verge of extinction. Once endemic to European waters, the group of sharks is now only found around the Canary Islands off Spain.
Other fish species like Atlantic salmon, halibut and trout have been over-fished to the point of vulnerability. Turbot populations have fallen by nearly a third in the past three decades, according to the list.
But some fish, like Atlantic cod and bluefin tuna, have seen STOCK Simprove.
One of the authors of the IUCN report, Chris Costello was quoted as saying that over-fishing was unnecessarily jeapordising the livelihood of fishing communities as well as the integrity of ecosystems. 
“We draw the lesson that granting rights to fishermen and their communities in the form of community cooperatives or individual transferable quotas gives them a long-term stake in the health of their fish stocks,” he said.
Simon Stuart, the chair of IUCN’s species survival commission, said, “It is alarming that many commercially and ecologically important species continue to be at risk in Europe. We need to take urgent action to reduce target and incidental catches of threatened species, and to set and enforce fishing quotas based on scientific understanding of population declines.”
The IUCN findings came on the same day as the World Bank warned of the economic costs of overfishing and the UN General Assembly agreed on the need for a new treaty to protect marine life in the high seas.

CURRENT AFFAIRS JUNE/05/2015



CURRENT AFFAIRS JUNE/05/2015

1. INDIA AND BELARUS SIGNED 6 AGREEMENTS:
i. India and Belarus signed 6 agreements during the visit of president to belarus.
ii. Agreements were signed by Indian president, PRANAB MUKHERJEE who is on a two day visit to belarus.
iii. About BELARUS:   Capital:- MINSK
                                        CURRENCY:- RUBBLE
                                         President:- ALEXANDER LUKASHENKO.

2. SURESH KALMADI CONFERRED WITH AAA PRESIDENT’S AWARD:
i. Suresh kalmadi is conferred with asian atheletics association president’s award.
ii. Adille Sumariwala, the president of atheletics federation of  india received the award on behalf of kalmadi at the function held in wuhan, China.

3. WJP RULA OF LAW INDEX 2015 RELEASED:
i. US based world justice project released rule of law index 2015.
ii. It provides data on how the rule of law is experienced in 102 countries around the globe.
iii. INDIA is paced at 59th position out of 102 countries.

4. INDIA’S FIRST RAIL COACH LIT BY SOLAR PANELS:
i. Northern Railway rolled out India’s first rail coach lit by solar panels.
ii. Delhi division of northern railway rolled out non-ac coach lit by solar panels mounted on it’s roof.