Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
09BRASILIA178
2009-02-12 13:59:00
UNCLASSIFIED
Embassy Brasilia
Cable title:  

SOUTH AMERICA ESTH NEWS, NUMBER 117

Tags:  SENV EAGR EAID TBIO ECON SOCI XR BR 
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UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 13 BRASILIA 000178 

SIPDIS

DEPT PASS USAID TO LAC/RSD, LAC/SAM, G/ENV, PPC/ENV
TREASURY FOR USED IBRD AND IDB AND INTL/MDB
USDA FOR FOREST SERVICE: LIZ MAHEW
INTERIOR FOR DIR INT AFFAIRS: K WASHBURN
INTERIOR FOR FWS: TOM RILEY
INTERIOR FOR NPS: JONATHAN PUTNAM
INTERIOR PASS USGS FOR INTERNATIONAL: J WEAVER
JUSTICE FOR ENVIRONMENT AND NATURAL RESOURCES: JWEBB
EPA FOR INTERNATIONAL: CAM HILL-MACON
USDA FOR ARS/INTERNATIONAL RESEARCH: G FLANLEY
NSF FOR INTERNATIONAL: HAROLD STOLBERG

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: SENV EAGR EAID TBIO ECON SOCI XR BR
SUBJECT: SOUTH AMERICA ESTH NEWS, NUMBER 117

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UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 13 BRASILIA 000178

SIPDIS

DEPT PASS USAID TO LAC/RSD, LAC/SAM, G/ENV, PPC/ENV
TREASURY FOR USED IBRD AND IDB AND INTL/MDB
USDA FOR FOREST SERVICE: LIZ MAHEW
INTERIOR FOR DIR INT AFFAIRS: K WASHBURN
INTERIOR FOR FWS: TOM RILEY
INTERIOR FOR NPS: JONATHAN PUTNAM
INTERIOR PASS USGS FOR INTERNATIONAL: J WEAVER
JUSTICE FOR ENVIRONMENT AND NATURAL RESOURCES: JWEBB
EPA FOR INTERNATIONAL: CAM HILL-MACON
USDA FOR ARS/INTERNATIONAL RESEARCH: G FLANLEY
NSF FOR INTERNATIONAL: HAROLD STOLBERG

E.O. 12958: N/A
TAGS: SENV EAGR EAID TBIO ECON SOCI XR BR
SUBJECT: SOUTH AMERICA ESTH NEWS, NUMBER 117

BRASILIA 00000178 001.2 OF 013



1. The following is part of a series of newsletters, published by
the Brasilia Regional Environmental Hub, covering environment,
science and technology, and health news in South America. The
information below was gathered from news sources from across the
region, and the views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of
the Hub office or our constituent posts. Addressees who would like
to receive a user-friendly email version of this newsletter should
contact Larissa Stoner at stonerla@state.gov. The e-mail version
also contains a calendar of upcoming ESTH events in the region.
NOTE: THE NEWSLETTER IS NOW ALSO AVAILABLE ON THE BRASILIA INTRANET
PAGE, BY CLICKING ON THE 'HUB' LINK.


2. Table of Contents

Agriculture
--(3)Peru Divided Over Benefits, Risks of GMOs
--(4)Brazil Soy Industry Spots More Amazon Clearing
--(5)ADM to Get Sustainable With Brazilian Soybean Farmers
--(6)Paraguay s Soy Producers Stage 'Tractorazo'

Water Issues
--(7)Study Confirms Chile Glaciers Receding Quickly

Forests
--(8)Brazil Reduces Environmental Restrictions on Agriculture in the
Amazon
--(9)Internal Brazil Fight May Hamper Amazon Protection
--(10)Amazon Rainforest Halfway To Tipping Point, Study Says
--(11)Brazil: Court Preparing Key Amazon Land-Rights Decision
--(12)For Peruvians, Baskets for the U.S. Market Bring a New Way of
Life

Wildlife
--(13)Peruvian Region Outlaws Biopiracy
--(14)Ten New Amphibian Species Discovered In Colombia

Fishing & Marine Conservation
--(15)Antarctic: Ocean Fertilization Experiment Suspended,
Reactivated
--(17)Panama Accused of Undermining Marine Preserve


Science & Technology
--(18)Brazil and China to Partner on New Technologies
--(19)Argentina: S&T Back on the Development Agenda

Extractive Industries
--(20)Correa Ally Explains Break with President Over Mining

Energy
--(21)Coal and Oil Will Make Magallanes "Chile's Energy Center"
--(22)Biofuels Head to Chile's Forests
--(23)Argentina to Stop Sale of Incandescent Bulbs
--(24)Brazilians Betting Obama Will Be Green Enough to Help Brazil
--(25)Brazilian Venture to Make New Variety of Diesel Fuel

Pollution
--(26)Cleaner Diesel Improves Air Quality in Bogota

Climate Change
--(27)Guyana and Norway Cooperate to Reduce Greenhouse gas
Emissions
--(28)Chile's CO2 Emissions Expected to Quadruple by 2030
--(29)Climate Change-Brazil: Calls for Adaptation Unheeded

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--(30)World Bank Urging Region to Keep Up Climate Efforts

General
--(31)UNASUR to Create Infrastructure Council in April

--------------
Agriculture
--------------


3. Peru Divided Over Benefits, Risks of GMOs

JAN. 2009 - The prospect of genetically modified crops spreading
through Peru's coastal desert, Andean highlands and tropical
lowlands has split government agencies. Agricultural officials argue
biotechnology offers hope to poor farmers, while environmental
officials assert it could jeopardize the country's rich biological
diversity. Even those in the center disagree on where and how to
draw the line, a state of affairs that is very much on display as
officials seek public comment for draft rules governing
implementation of Peru's 1999 biosafety law. Such debate
intensified last July, when a separate measure associated with the
biosafety law-a decree promoting biotechnology and empowering the
National Institute for Agricultural Innovation (Inia) to conduct
biotech oversight and research-was implemented, sparking an outcry
from environmentalists. Environment Minister Antonio Brack Egg, a
strong supporter of conservation and sustainable use of Peru's
genetic resources, called for a public comment period on measures
needed to implement both the 1999 biosafety law and the July decree.
The Agriculture Ministry posted the regulations on its Web site, but
in December 2008 Inia chief Juan Risi Carbone said no comments had
been received. Activists, however, note the ministry had not
indicated how, when or to whom comments were to be submitted.

Source - EcoAmericas (please contact Larissa Stoner for complete
article)


4. Brazil Soy Industry Spots More Amazon Clearing

JAN. 20, 2009 - Brazil's grain crushing industry that vowed to stop
buying soybeans farmed on freshly cleared Amazon biome said that it
has identified 365 newly deforested areas since its first survey, in
July 2007. The industry is now investigating if soybeans have been
planted in the areas, from which it will refuse to purchase grains,
the Brazilian Vegetable Oils Industry Association (Abiove) said.
The recently discovered areas add to 263 others which were
deforested during the year finished in July 2007. At that time, none
of them had been used for soy planting. A report with detailed
information and photographs will be made public by March, when soy
sales in Brazil tend to peak and companies would still have
conditions to impose a ban on soy from specific areas. Abiove
contracted Globalsat to inspect the areas by air and ground and
prepare the report, based also on satellite information provided by
state-run Inpe (National Space Research Institute). All major grain
processors with operations in Brazil, such as ADM (ADM.N),Cargill
[CARG.UL] and Bunge (BG.N) participate in the Soy Moratorium, along
with nongovernmental organizations like Greenpeace and WWF Brazil.
The initiative was launched in July 2006 and then renewed in June
2008, when the environment ministry first came on board and began to
cooperate.

Source - Reuters


5. ADM to Get Sustainable With Brazilian Soybean Farmers

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JAN. 14, 2009 - Archer Daniels Midland Co. said it has joined with
Brazilian nonprofit environmental group Alianca Da Terra to launch a
program aimed at encouraging Brazilian soy-bean farmers to adopt
sustainable practices. The program, Produzindo Certo, or "doing it
right," seeks to help farmers maximize the yield potential of their
farmland to minimize the environmentally damaging conversion of
Brazilian wildland to farm acreage, the U.S. grain-processing and
ethanol producer said. As the world's appetite for protein and
grains expands, Brazilian growers have aggressively expanded
production by stripping the nation's forests and savannas and
turning them into farmland. The situation is an ecological disaster
in the making, many critics say, complicated by the fact that high
demand means the typically low-income owners of the Brazilian
frontier land can sell stripped acreage for five or six times the
price of undeveloped land. The issue is a sensitive one for U.S.
companies that buy or process grain grown on such lands, and at
ADM's November shareholder meeting, representatives of a group known
as the Rainforest Action Network called on ADM to help fight
destruction of the rainforest.

Source - Chicago Tribune


6. Paraguay's Soy Producers Stage 'Tractorazo'

JAN. 2009 - With peasant farmers threatening land invasions to
demand land reform and end perceived environmental abuses,
Paraguay's soybean producers last month staged a two-day
demonstration intended to call the government's attention to rural
turmoil. Hundreds of medium- and large-scale soy producers parked
their tractors on Dec. 15 and 16 along the sides of the roads in 13
departments, creating a so-called "tractorazo", underscoring the
importance of peasant labor to agricultural production. The protest
by soy producers comes after months of marches on Asuncisn and
threats of land invasion by thousands of small and landless
peasants, or campesinos, demanding agrarian reform and an end to the
spraying of toxic agro-chemicals. Handling the tensions that fueled
it marks a key test for President Fernando Lugo, a former Roman
Catholic bishop who took office Aug.15.

Source - EcoAmericas (please contact Larissa Stoner for complete
article)

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Water Issues
--------------


7. Study Confirms Chile Glaciers Receding Quickly

JAN. 22, 2009 - Chilean environmental authorities are beginning to
worry more about fresh water resources after a government study
determined that 92 percent of the country's glaciers - Chile's
principal fresh water suppliers - are receding. The study,
performed by Chile's National Water Directorate (DGA),looked at 100
of the nation's 1,720 registered glaciers spanning from northern
Region III to Puerto Williams at the far southern tip of the
country. Researchers found that only seven of the studied glaciers
remain in stable condition, and only one glacier is actually
growing. DGA Director Rodrigo Weisner said the results are not
surprising. Glacial melting is a common phenomenon brought on by
global climate change, and Weisner believes that it is practically
inevitable in light of climate change. "But we can still take
measures to understand its rhythm, study its behavior, and prevent

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harmful effects," he said. The most important problem associated
with receding glaciers is the nation's loss of its most important
source of fresh water. Glaciers, compressed masses of ice that
slowly carve through landscapes, provide nearly 75 percent of the
world's fresh water, according to the University of Colorado's
National Snow and Ice Data Center.

Source - Santiago Times

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Forests
--------------


8. Brazil Reduces Environmental Restrictions on Agriculture in the
Amazon

FEB. 06, 2009 - The Government of Brazil approved the expansion of
legal farming areas in the Amazon region. A committee with
representatives from 13 ministries changed the rules concerning
reforestation around two main roads cutting through the northern
region of Brazil, including the "Transamazonian" highway, ultimately
reducing the area environmentally protected. The measure now
requires those who deforest for farming to reforest only 50% of the
land rather than 80%. The measure will go to the National
Environmental Council for approval before being finally presented to
President Lula. Greenpeace has condemned the proposal, stating that
"it legitimizes environmental crime." In related news, Brazilian
Minister for Strategic Planning, Mangabeira Unger, advocated that
environmental licenses for PAC-sponsored construction sites be
expedited in the Amazon region. Environmental Minister Carlos Minc
critiqued the proposed measure saying that there can be no "special
regime" for GOB-sponsored initiatives.

Source - Public Affairs US Embassy Brasilia


9. Internal Brazil Fight May Hamper Amazon Protection

JAN. 31, 2009 - Last week's World Social Forum, a global
counterculture gathering dedicated partly to preserving the world's
rain forests, became a bureaucratic battleground for two Brazilian
officials squabbling over what to do with the vast Amazon region.
Environment Minister Carlos Minc used the World Social Forum to take
shots at Agriculture Minister Reinhold Stephanes, who is accused by
environmentalists of encouraging soy and sugar cane plantations that
are blamed for much deforestation. "Our problem is not with
agriculture, it is with Minister Stephanes," Environment Minister
Carlos Minc told reporters at the social forum. Stephanes countered
by saying that "either he (Minc) understands nothing, or he isn't
behaving correctly with me." The feud forced President Luiz Inacio
Lula da Silva to order the ministers to stop talking about one
another in public, according to accounts in Brazil's leading
newspapers, citing anonymous aides close to Silva. Greenpeace
campaigner Andre Muggiati said a bigger issue is the fight for cash.
"The environment ministry is a weak ministry," he said, noting that
the agriculture ministry budget is around $22 billion a year while
that of the environment ministry is some $174 million. "How can the
ministry of environment build strong measures for protection when
the agriculture ministry right across the street is spending
billions in an activity that has a strong impact on the
environment?" Muggiati said.

Source - Associated Press


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10. Amazon Rainforest Halfway To Tipping Point, Study Says

JAN. 2009 - The results of a four-year research study on the impact
of progressive Amazon deforestation show that a threshold exists at
which abrupt changes in climate caused by land-clearing occur,
harming the biome's vegetation. The study also suggests that a
"tipping point" exists at which some rainforest regions lose their
capacity to regenerate. The study, done by researchers at Brazil's
state-run National Institute for Space Research (INPE) and presented
at an Amazon conference in the western city of Manaus in November,
used models to project future changes in climate and vegetation in
the Amazon. Underlying the forecasts were data gathered since the
early 1990s on Amazon-region deforestation rates and road
construction, which has been a key precursor to land clearing. An
estimated 20% of the Brazilian Amazon has been deforested since
European settlement of the region. The study says that once 40% of
the Amazon has been cut-a point that will be reached in 2050 if
average deforestation rates since the early 1990s continue-rainfall
levels will plummet by 18% to 20%, temperatures will increase by
1.70 Centigrade and the evaporation rate will drop by 11%. The study
forecasts that these climate effects would turn the eastern Amazon,
where deforestation is heaviest, into a savannah, but not cause
similar changes in the western part of the Amazon. They also would
decrease rainfall and accelerate desertification in northeastern
Brazil, and reduce rainfall in northern Argentina and Paraguay, the
study says.

Source - EcoAmericas (contact Larissa Stoner for complete article)


11. Brazil: Court Preparing Key Amazon Land-Rights Decision

JAN. 2009 - Brazil's Supreme Court is expected to order in February
the removal of white settlers from one of the biggest indigenous
reserves in the Amazon, a vast swath of rainforest larger than the
U.S. state of Connecticut. The decision, addressing a long-standing
dispute over land rights in the 4.2-million-acre (1.7-million-ha)
Raposa Serra do Sol indigenous reserve in the northern state of
Roraima, would likely set precedent for the handling of other such
conflicts in the Brazilian Amazon. Indians inhabiting the reserve
have clashed violently with settlers in the past, and have vowed to
expel them if the high court doesn't. Meanwhile, the settlers have
said they would not leave voluntarily. When police attempted to
evict them last April, they blockaded roads and destroyed bridges.
At issue is the refusal of some 400 settlers-six large rice-farm
operators and 10 big cattle ranchers and their employees-to leave
Raposa Serra do Sol despite government offers to indemnify them for
their investments and resettle them just south of the reserve. But a
Supreme Court vote last month made their removal all but a foregone
conclusion. In a decision that has yet to be finalized, eight of the
court's 11 justices, a clear majority, favored expulsion of the
settlers.

Source - EcoAmericas (please contact Larissa Stoner for complete
article)


12. For Peruvians, Baskets for the U.S. Market Bring a New Way of
Life

JAN. 19, 2009 - Women in a remote Amazon village can weave fibers
from the branch of the chambira palm tree into practically anything
they need - fishing nets, hammocks, purses, skirts and dental floss.
However, for the last year they have put their hopes in baskets,
weaving hundreds to build inventory for export to the United States.

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Their first international buyers are the San Diego Natural History
Museum and San Diego Zoo, and they plan to sell to other museums and
home dcor purveyors like the Field Museum in Chicago and eventually
Cost Plus. The circuitous route these baskets have taken from the
jungle to American store shelves started with a bird watcher's
passion for natural habitats, passed through a regional government
whose policies have become increasingly more conservationist, and,
supporters say, should end with better lives for the weavers and
their communities. The enterprise is one of many ventures here in
the Amazon aimed at "productive conservation," which advocates say
will save the rain forest by transforming it into a renewable
economic resource for local people.

Source - The New York Times

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Wildlife
--------------


13. Peruvian Region Outlaws Biopiracy

JAN. 21, 2009 - A municipality of Peru is claiming to be the first
in the world to enact a law outlawing biopiracy and protecting
indigenous knowledge at a regional level. Cusco - in the Peruvian
Andes, once the capital of the Inca Empire - has outlawed the
plundering of native species for commercial gain, including
patenting resources or the genes they contain. Corporations or
scientists must now seek permission from, and potentially share
benefits with, the local people whose traditions have protected the
species for centuries. Indigenous communities can now implement ways
to protect local resources, including creating registers of
biodiversity and protocols for granting access to it. Local
scientists and activists believe the law's value lies in the fact
that for the first time a regional government will be empowered to
challenge its national government on biopiracy. But while the law is
an important precedent, it could come into conflict with national
laws regarding the recording of indigenous knowledge, said Maria
Scurrah, a Peruvian scientist specializing in farmer's rights.

Source - SciDev


14. Ten New Amphibian Species Discovered In Colombia

FEB. 02, 2009 - Scientists announced y the discovery of 10 amphibian
species in Colombia potentially new to science, including an
orange-legged rain frog, three poison frogs and three transparent
"glass" frogs. During a three-week expedition in Colombia's
northwestern Tacarcuna hills in the Darien Gap bordering Panama,
scientists identified about 60 species of amphibians, 20 reptiles
and almost 120 species of birds, many of them apparently unique to
the area. The expedition, led by Conservation International
herpetologists and ornithologists from Colombia's Ecotropico
Foundation, identified potentially new species of amphibians,
including three glass frogs, whose transparent skin can reveal
internal organs, a harlequin frog, two rain frogs and one
salamander. The group said Colombia has one of the most diverse
amphibian communities in the world, with 754 species currently
recorded.

Source - AFP (no link)

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Fishing & Marine Conservation

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--------------


15. Antarctic: Ocean Fertilization Experiment Suspended, Reactivated


JAN. 20, 2009 - An Indo-German iron fertilization experiment
(LOHAFEX) planned for a deep-ocean area near Antarctica has been
suspended, pending an independent assessment of its environmental
impact. The suspension follows intervention by the German Ministry
for Education and Research following pressure from environmental
groups. The Montreal-based ETC Group, the Indian Biodiversity Forum,
German researchers and others had protested against the experiment
on the ground that it was fraught with potentially severe ecological
consequences and violated the moratorium on ocean fertilization
decided upon by the ninth Conference of the Parties to the
Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD). The experiment envisaged
dumping of about 20 tons of iron sulfate in the Scotia Sea near
Antarctica to induce an algal bloom.

Source - IISD


16. UPDATE: The German Science Ministry announced on January 26 that
it will allow the controversial "LOHAFEX" experiment to proceed in
the Southern Ocean. Following an NGO publicity campaign that
claimed LOHAFEX violated the Convention on



17. Panama Accused of Undermining Eastern Tropical Pacific Marine
Preserve

JAN. 2009 - Four years after banning commercial fishing in
species-rich Coiba National Park, Panama's National Assembly revoked
a critical article of the law prohibiting the use of purse-seine
nets for tuna fishing in the 1,040-square-mile (2,700-sq-km) marine
preserve. Environmentalists say the June 30 repeal of the ban on
purse-seine tuna fishing in Coiba, reportedly influenced by Spanish
tuna companies, could pose serious risks to endangered marine
turtles and dozens of species of sharks, whales and dolphins, which
can become trapped in the purse seines as bycatch. They also say it
undermines Panama's ocean conservation commitments under a 2004
treaty signed with Colombia, Costa Rica and Ecuador to protect
migratory marine species in a vast swath of ocean named the Marine
Conservation Corridor of the Eastern Tropical Pacific.

Source - EcoAmericas (please contact Larissa Stoner for complete
article)

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Science & Technology
--------------


18. Brazil and China to Partner on New Technologies

JAN. 22, 2009 - Brazil and China have agreed to collaborate on
developing technologies to tackle energy problems and climate
change. The Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Brazil (UFRJ),
and the University of Tsinghua, China, have announced the creation
of the Brazil-China Center for Innovative Technologies, Climate
Change and Energy. The center, to be based at the University of
Tsinghua, in Beijing, will receive almost US$1 million in initial
investment from the Brazilian innovation agency, Research and
Projects Financing (FINEP). The Brazilian part of the center will be
headed by the Graduate Engineering Project Coordination (COPPE) of

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the UFRJ. One of the center's first goals will be to map biofuel
sources in Brazil and China, in order to develop common approaches
to their exploitation. Another will be to estimate greenhouse gas
emissions by both countries and provide their respective governments
with technical information to help them develop mitigation policies.
The projects will aim to produce practical results for Brazilian
and Chinese industries, and to provide high quality science and
technology information for governments.

Source - SciDev


19. Argentina: S&T Back on the Development Agenda

DEC. 02, 2008 - After more than 40 years of active persecution
followed by years of government indifference, science and technology
(S&T) are making a dramatic return to the development agenda in
Argentina. Seen as a breeding ground for political dissent,
academia was targeted for suppression by the Argentinean military
government from the 1960s to the 1980s. The field continued to
suffer in the 1990s under President Carlos Menem who was
uninterested in research, and through a financial crisis. But now,
President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner has said she sees science
as a "key to the nation's economic future". Following her election
in October 2007, Kirchner set up a Ministry of Science, Technology
and Productive Innovation and hopes to increase the country's
investment in S&T from 0.66 per cent in 2007 to one per cent in

2010. To retain scientists and lure them back from overseas the
government plans to increase their monthly salaries by 30 per cent
to about US$1,000 a month; increase the 2009 government budget for
competitive research grants by 40 per cent; and build a US$50
million science complex in Buenos Aires.

Source - SciDev

--------------
Extractive Industries
--------------


20. Correa Ally Explains Break with President Over Mining

JAN. 2009 - EcoAmericas January edition brings a Q&A with Msnica
Chuji Gualinga, an indigenous-rights activist from the Ecuadorian
Amazon community of Sarayacu who supported Rafael Correa in his
successful 2006 run for president of Ecuador. In 2007, she served as
his first communications minister. Now, however, Chuji is one of
Correa's fiercest critics on account of a sharp disagreement over
mining. Chuji left Correa's cabinet after six months and won
election to the Constituent Assembly, which last year rewrote
Ecuador's constitution and passed various high-profile measures. One
measure she helped broker, largely due to environmental concerns,
suspended mining in Ecuador in January 2008. More recently, on Jan.
12, a new mining bill allowing the resumption of open-pit mining
practices, was passed by a commission appointed to serve as an
interim legislative body pending the election of a new Congress in
April of this year. Ms. Chuji, who is not on the commission, argues
that if signed by Correa, the legislation will do irreversible
environmental harm by allowing large-scale open-pit mining.

Source - EcoAmericas (please contact Larissa Stoner for complete
interview)

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Energy

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21. Coal and Oil Will Make Magallanes "Chile's Energy Center"

FEB. 03, 2009 - According to Chile's National Energy Commission
president Marcelo Tokman, the Magallanes region in the extreme south
of Chile is becoming the "energy center of the country" based
primarily on the development of coal resources and the exploration
for hydrocarbons. "The coal mining project at Isla Riesco in a
context of world energy crisis has become strategic, because we need
to diversify our energy matrix", said Tokman during a visit to Punta
Arenas. The Isla Riesco's four exploitable areas have proven
reserves of 200 million tons of coal, so far the largest in Chile.
Tokman also emphasized the significance of the hydrocarbons
exploration drive in Magallanes and Tierra del Fuego which has
attracted "important oil companies and millions of US dollars in
investments". Chile dependence on foreign coal supplies for its
coal-based electricity generation is 93%, but with the development
of the Isla Riesco resources, "we will ensure stability to our
coal-based electricity generating plants".

Source - MercoPress


22. Biofuels Head to Chile's Forests

FEB. 02, 2009 - Chile has set its sights on producing
second-generation plant-based fuels from forest biomass within the
next five years. However, Chile's environmental and social
activities warn that the country must also consider the
environmental and socioeconomic impacts of such an endeavor.
Chile's heavy energy dependence on fossil fuels and its continued
increase in emissions of climate-changing gases have led this South
American country to pursue renewable energy options like solar,
wind, geothermal and biomass. A law passed in April 2008 requires
that as of 2010 at least five percent of Chile's electricity must
come from non-conventional renewable sources, including biomass.
Beginning in 2015, the proportion must increase 0.5 percent annually
until reaching a full 10 percent in 2024. Two consortiums were
created in October for research and development of lignocellulosic
biofuels, that is, fuels based on woody fibers. The goal is to
"surpass the expansion limits and the grave conflicts that the
current crop-based fuels (made from foods like maize or sugarcane)
can create," said Guilherme Schuetz, coordinator of the regional
biofuels group of the United Nations Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO).

Source - Tierramerica


23. Argentina to Stop Sale of Incandescent Bulbs

JAN. 2009 - Beginning Dec. 31, 2010, the sale of incandescent light
bulbs will be illegal in Argentina. The prohibition, proposed last
March by Argentine President Cristina Kirchner, cleared its last
legislative hurdle when the Senate approved it on Dec. 17 by
unanimous vote. The Senate left intact a change that the lower
house of Congress, the Chamber of Deputies, made to the proposal
last June. While Kirchner's proposal prohibited production of
incandescent bulbs in Argentina, the modified version that is now
law only bans their importation and sale. This means incandescent
bulbs could continue to be manufactured in Argentina as long as they
are exported. The new law empowers the government to eliminate
import taxes on energy-efficient fluorescent bulbs and on the parts
and equipment needed to produce them. It does not address the

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disposal of used fluorescent bulbs, which contain mercury, but an
electronic-waste bill now being debated in Congress does provide for
the collection of spent fluorescent bulbs. Cuba, Venezuela and
Nicaragua have launched Latin America's most aggressive programs to
root out incandescent bulbs, according to the Argentine office of
the environmental group Greenpeace.

Source - EcoAmericas


24. Brazilians Betting Obama Will Be Green Enough to Help Brazil

JAN. 22, 2009 - Brazil is hoping that its ethanol industry may gain
momentum and space in the United States market during the
administration of Barack Obama, who has already shown himself drawn
towards environmental causes. Obama's campaign commitments included
reducing carbon emissions by 80% by 2050, reducing dependence on
foreign oil imports, developing and implementing clean energy
technologies and making the United States a leading country in
issues pertaining to climate change. The world's leading economy
aims to consume 136 billion liters of ethanol in 2022. The current
consumption is 30 billion (against 25 billion in Brazil). Andre
Nassar, Director General at Icone (Institute of Studies on Trade and
International Negotiation),believes that Obama's concern with
increasing energy efficiency may also translate into the United
States' participation in the post-Kyoto Protocol and in a new clean
development mechanism for carbon trade, with the adoption of goals
for reducing emission of greenhouse gases. Besides selling more
ethanol to the United States, Brazil could attract United States
investment in clean energy and also develop partnerships for
technology transfer, research and development.

Source - Brazzilmag


25. Brazilian Venture to Make New Variety of Diesel Fuel

JAN. 2009 - Amyris, a California-based biotechnology firm, and
Crystalsev, a Brazilian ethanol distributor, recently formed a joint
venture to commercially produce a cleaner, renewable form of diesel
fuel from sugarcane, the first such venture of its kind anywhere.
Sugarcane diesel has substantially the same chemical structure as
fossil-fuel diesel, except that the former has one type of
hydrocarbon molecule and the latter contains a range of them. The
main difference in the two diesels' physical properties is that
sugarcane diesel contains no sulfur and when burned emits no
nitrogen oxide, making it that much more eco-friendly. And the fuel
is not related to biodiesel, which is made by blending vegetable oil
and ethanol with standard diesel. The California biotech firm,
Amyris, says it has pioneered a way to make cleaner, renewable
diesel by genetically modifying a yeast, which is then used to
ferment sugarcane juice. This metabolizes the cane juice into a
pre-diesel, after which some alcohols and impurities are removed to
yield pure diesel. The joint venture plans in 2010 to begin
producing 10 million liters (2.64 million gallons) of sugarcane
diesel annually in Brazil. That production will occur at an ethanol
refinery owned by Santelisa Vale, Brazil's second largest ethanol
producer and the controlling shareholder of Crystalsev.

Source - EcoAmericas (contact L. Stoner for complete article)

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Pollution
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26. Cleaner Diesel Improves Air Quality in Bogota

FEB. 11, 2009 - Due to tighter Ministry of Environment (MOE)
regulations and clean diesel measures taken by state oil company
Ecopetrol, Bogota's air quality -- historically among the poorest in
Latin America -- is the best that it has been in the last twelve
years. Both the MOE and Ecopetrol publicly reiterate that in 2009
they will take further steps to improve air quality, with Ecopetrol
planning to invest USD600 million over four years to increase
Colombia's capacity to produce clean diesel locally.

Source - BOGOTA 420

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Climate Change
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27. Guyana and Norway Cooperate to Reduce Greenhouse gas
EmissionsFEB. 04, 2009 - President of Guyana Bharrat Jagdeo and
Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg in Oslo, Norway, agreed to
establish a partnership to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from
Guyana deforestation, with the goal to establish mechanisms on
deforestation and forest degradation to be included in a post-2012
climate change agreement. In a joint statement, the two leaders said
they have agreed on the need to keep climate change firmly at the
top of the international agenda and underlined that it is essential
to reach an ambitious agreement in Copenhagen in December. According
to Stoltenberg, efforts could include results-based mechanisms, as
well as adequate, predictable and sustainable financial compensation
- to be ultimately determined through future United Nations
Framework Convention On Climate Change (UNFCCC) negotiations from
m
developed countries to developing countries for their REDD efforts.


Source - Caribbean Net News


28. Chile's CO2 Emissions Expected to Quadruple by 2030

JAN. 12, 2009 - Chile's CO2 emissions are expected to quadruple by
2030, failing change to its national energy policy, the Chilean
Minister for Energy, Marcelo Tokman, warned. The estimated increase
is largely credited to the sharp rise in planned construction of
coal-fired power stations, as predicted in a recently issued report,
the New Guidelines for Energy Policy, that was presented to
President Bachelet by the Minister for Energy on January 6... The
report warns: 'Chile must assume the risk of being subjected to
restrictions or costs associated with international measures taken
to tackle global warming'.

Source - Carbon Offsets Daily

29. Brazil: Flooding Leads to Calls for Preventive Measures

JAN. 09, 2009 - Torrential rains have deluged several Brazilian
states since November, causing nearly 200 deaths so far and
reinforcing environmentalist campaigns calling for urgent adaptation
measures. At least 136 people have been killed by mudslides or
flooding in the southern state of Santa Catarina over the past two
months. A large number of people are also missing, and there are 300
confirmed cases of leptospirosis, which will add to the likely death
toll. The rains flooded, damaged or destroyed the homes of over 1.5
million people in Santa Catarina, one-quarter of the state's
population. The affected regions are in the east of the state, the

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most industrialized and populous part of Santa Catarina, so the
economic losses are enormous. In the central state of Minas Gerais,
23 people have died and 60,000 people in 97 towns and cities have
had to abandon their homes. Tens of thousands of people's homes were
flooded in the Atlantic seaboard states of Rio de Janeiro and
Esprito Santo, where there were at least six deaths from
leptospirosis, and the death toll is mounting. Environmentalists
call for measures to prevent the expansion of cities into risk
areas, including educating communities, training civil defense
staff, and rehabilitating "structural works" such as slope
stabilization and cleaning river beds and banks to ensure
unobstructed passage for floodwaters.

Source - IPS News


30. World Bank Urging Region to Keep Up Climate Efforts

JAN. 2009 - A new World Bank report on Latin America and the
Caribbean warns that the region must not let the global financial
crisis derail its efforts against climate change. Latin America has
made significant advances in fighting global warming through the use
of new technologies in renewable energy, biofuels and transport, and
could lead developing nations in such efforts, the report says. But
with climate-related problems such as natural disasters and
declining agricultural productivity looming, the report contends,
the region must not let economic pressures undermine clean-energy
investment. Instead, it says, the region should take advantage of
opportunities afforded by the crisis. Massive public investment in
clean energy can be a "win-win" policy that also stimulates economic
recovery, the World Bank argues. Moreover, the report contends,
"countries that switch from a high-carbon to a low-carbon economy
during the economic slump can enjoy 'first mover advantages,' that
is, a greater competitive ability to promote long-term growth."
Entitled "Low Carbon, High Growth: Latin American Responses to
Climate Change," the study is part of an annual effort by the World
Bank to lay groundwork for inter-governmental debates and options in
different areas through so-called flagship reports.

Source - EcoAmericas (please contact Larissa Stoner for complete
article)

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General
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31. UNASUR to Create Infrastructure Council in April

DEC. 31, 2008 - Government representatives from the Union of South
American Nations (UNASUR) plan to establish an infrastructure
council in April 2009, Chilean President Michelle Bachelet told
BNamericas. The council is expected to be created at the next UNASUR
meeting, scheduled for April 20 2010, when Bachelet will also leave
her post as the organization's pro tempore president. The new
infrastructure council will analyze, plan and coordinate
infrastructure development among UNASUR members: Argentina, Bolivia,
Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Guyana, Paraguay, Peru, Suriname,
Uruguay and Venezuela. The objective is to support the development
of the South American infrastructure integration initiative IIRSA,
which has been subject to delays accentuated by the financial
crisis. Among the projects to be analyzed by the council are the
TransAndino Central rail tunnel and IIRSA-related highways. The
council will also set up amicable frameworks for airport, port,
rail, highway and waterway initiatives, among others, as the

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development of such projects is often affected by political
interests.

Source - BIC

SOBEL