Saturday, November 30, 2013

Rain or Fish or Organ Harvesting!



           1.     harness
           verb
  Exploit, control, channel, apply, employ, utilize, mobilize, make productive, turn to account, render  useful

  2.     harvest n.
1. The act or process of gathering a crop.
2.
a. The crop that ripens or is gathered in a season.
b. The amount or measure of the crop gathered in a season.
c. The time or season of such gathering.
3. The result or consequence of an activity.


3reap  
v. reapedreap·ingreaps
v.tr.
1. To cut (grain or pulse) for harvest with a scythe, sickle, or reaper.
2. To harvest (a crop).
3. To harvest a crop from: reaping a field.
4. To obtain as a result of effort: She reaped large profits from her unique invention.
v.intr.
1. To cut or harvest grain or pulse.
2. To obtain a return or reward.

I am not in agreement with people using the word 'harvesting' when the rewards were not the effect of their efforts. As a farmer it hurts me somehow. We  are free to use any other phrase or word to refer to the acts of collecting rain water, catching fish and in organ donations and their replacement.

Nothing we do to 'grow rains' but we call it a 'harvest'. In fact we all sing a negative rain-rhyme all over the world asking it to 'go away'.   Bad in spirit. In the similar manner 'harvest' means only a sickle and the Solitary Reaper of Wordsworth comes to my mind. People use nets to catch fish and call their 'catch' as 'harvest'. Again not in order. Finally the same  sickle or knife comes to my mind when doctors speak of 'harvesting organs'.  One shudders to think that the doctors are readying with a sharp knife ( the so called life savers) to cut open and reap or harvest an organ that is so dear to us as our Shylock would do .


Hence I suggest that 'rain  water collection' for ' rain or water harvesting'.  No need to harvest fishes.  People do use  'catch'  and many similar words and they do good.

And in organ donations  'organ collections or collecting is sufficient'.

More on rain harvesting.. no.. rain water collection .. later






A Bitter Harvest | Tehelka.com

A Bitter Harvest | Tehelka.com

Rain Harvesting And Eritrean Story




INTRODUCTION

Eritrea is located over the horn of Africa extended from latitudes 12.50 to 18N 0& Longitude 36.500 E to 44 0 E .A narrow strip of highlands with altitude exceeding 2000 meters run from south to North surrounded by a large portion of low lands to the East and West. The State is bordered to the East with the Red sea to the West and to the North with the Republic of Sudan and to the South with Ethiopia and Djibouti.

Eritrea is an arid and semi-arid country and is not endowed with rich water recourses. Further more being part of sahelien Africa it has been the victim of recurrent and devastating droughts. It is also a country predominantly dependent on rain fed agriculture. The majority of the population depends on ground water as its main water supply source.

Rainfall in Eritrea is torrential, is of high intensity over a short duration very unpredictable and occurs sporadically. Owing to the rugged nature the high lands (highest rainfall areas), thin soil formations, and new largely forested terrain most of the rain develops in to flash floods. Thus soil-water filtration is very low.
In the low lands areas even though there are favorable geological formation, infiltaration is also low owing to high evaporation rates and lower intensity rainfall.

Urbanisation is increasing very fast in Eritrea, as is population growth in general. At the same time, land degradation, industrialization, and the consequent negative implication on water recourses, are increasing. Eventhough water is recycled by the mechanism of hydrologic cycling, the overall picture for Eritrea is that waters is in essence a scarce resource. Optimal allocation of this basic necessity is of crucial importance, as the demand for water is increasing across every sector. This is particularly relevant for Eritrea, which has deprived water recourses.


NEED FOR RAIN WATER HARVESTING FROM ROOF CATCHMENT IN ERITREA.
The major source of dinking water supply in Eritrea is ground water. The ground water is replenished through the annual rainfall occurrence and the subsequent run off that prevails in each locality with the increase in the frequency of recurring drought situations and in the further elongations the drought the scarcity of ground water has worsened in recent years. The topography of the country particularly the rugged and very steep ground surface features in the high lands .In the low lands the ground water recharge is result of fast flowing runoffs which have very limited retention period for water percolation and ground water recharge in the highlands. In the low lands the ground water recharge is restricted along the riverbed and the adjacent riverbanks. Thus is most of the country a large portion of the rain water is lost fast as run off water beyond the reach of communities in order to over come domestic water supply scarcity there is an urgent need to retain and use the rain water directly at point where it is generated mainly at household and community level-from roofs of buildings.

 Through such interventions it is possible to obtain a supplemental water source to prop-up the ground water sources that are being depleted with the passage of time. It would be essential to have rain-water harvesting facilities at all dwellings and public buildings where the rainwater falls and flows as retainable run off. In this regards it is required to make it mandatory for dwelling and public builiding where the rainfalls and flows as retainable runoff. In this regards it is required to make it mandatory for dwellings and public buildings to have rain water- harvested facilities in their plans at the time of their construction where appropriate rainwater harvesting facilities should be provided also in already existing building.



JUSTIFICATION AND STRENGTHING OF THE IDEA
Many of the wood, earth and thatch made rural houses even in the remote areas of the country are now being substituted with galvanized and corrugated iron sheet roofing. The reason is that the wood of the old houses has worn out and there is no forest where people can get good size lumber for rehabilitating their house as well as for constructing new ones.

Deforestation coupled with drought has turned the nearest water source to disappear and thus obliged people to fetch water from far distance valleys and riverbed excavations which resulted into adverse effect of water scarcity through time. It has as well resulted into difficulties of long travel hours up and down from hill top villages in search of few liters of water particularly to women and the young. In this context the best remedy is hence, to introduce roof catchments rain water harvest by sensitizing training and formulating pilot projects.

The pilot projects may have to be accomplished in such away that people can benefit by accepting realities such as: -
- They can get clean water just from out side their doors.
- They reduce arduous method and time spent to fetch water
- They ensure health and sanitation of their women and children
- They spend comparatively small initial cost and by assumption recover it through along time.
- They get better amount of water as compared to carrying out from far places though out their life,
- They are ensured for at least six months supply of the year depending on economically they use it.

HISTORICAL BACKGROUND ON RAIN WATER HARVESTING
Rainwater harvest has been practiced for more than 4000 years and in most developing countries is becoming essential owing to the temporal and spatial variability of rainfall. Water harvesting is necessary in areas having significant rainfall but lacking any kind of convectional or centralized water supply system in areas where good Quantity fresh surface water or ground water is lacking
Cisterns are an ancient method of water harvesting; dating back to the early Roman civilization. Cisterns are usually built to provide water storage. Water is collected in the from of runoff from roacklined catchment or other suitable, non porous surface
In a place called Arberobus the Italians built a cistern. The aim of the cistern was initially to harvest water and supply for the steam driven locomotive. When the rainwater transportation was stopped the people of Arberobus continued to use this cistern for domestic water supply. Today about five hundred families are using water from the cistern for their life activities according to water resources analysis Estimate of water that can be harvested for 5mm runoff from 200ha-2km2 represents 10 millions liters .If Evaporation see page remove 75% the reinforcement still enough to supply the in home needs of people for 18 months.
The Cistern method requirements protection on
- Minimize evaporation & Seepage.
- Prevent physical, chemical & Biological Contamination.
- Diseases prevention should be as an integral part of any water recourses development projects.
This technology is widely used in the eastern escarpment of Eritrean, Particularly in Semenawi Bahri .

RAIN WATER HARVESTING THROUGH ROOF CATCHEMENT TECHNIQUE.
Rainfall data assessment
Assessment of average annual rainfall was made to characterize and categorized roof catchments harvest applicability in the country. Therefore an average low range of 250mm and 500 mm higher range are taken for both mid-highlands with Semi-arid climate and highland of semi-humid climate respectively. Based on the assessment yet more than 30% of the country spatial area can benefit from roof catchments rainwater harvesting .The assessment is based on maximum 20 years data available collected from meteorological stations.
Map 1. - Mean Annual Rainfall Pattern For Eritrea
DELINEATION OF ROOF CATCHMENT ZONES.
Considering the topographic contrasts and Elevation as well as their relation ship to rainfall intensity as a main criteria, it is assumed that population residing in almost 40% of the country are able to benefit rainfall roof catchments harvest. The area comprises part of the south Eastern as carpment around Senafe in Regali river watershed, upper reaches of Aligheder river Escarpment of She-ib Wadilaca extending up to Nakfa mid highland and areas of gash barka south of Kerekebet up to the border of Setit (Tekeze) river. Arid lands along the Sudan border and the whole coastal stretch are excluded.
Pilot Roof catchment Harvest introduction in Town of Mendefera
The Zoba Debub administration in collaboration with its infrastructures Department (Engineering Service and project Management unit) and town administration has introduced incorporation of underground water collecting tanks from roof catchments as a must in its new housing development areas .The obligation is entered between individual house building or during authentication of their building design. Theguideline is being applied on 65% efficiency particularly at Mendefera town new housing constructions.
A minimum collecting tank volume of 10m3 permitted while the maximum depends on
The free area of the building compound and owner affordability. Monitoring of the constructions is usually done through each town Engineering unit experts.

METHODS OF RAIN WATER ROOF CATHCMENT HARVESTING
Roof catchments can be of many types but few of the most applicable are given below in relation to their recommendable water quality.
- Galvanized corrugated iron sheet as most preferable but with non toxic painting
- Corrugated plastic and smoothened tiles as secondary preference
- Smoothened and reinforced cement concrete as good when kept clean.
- Palm or hay thatched roofs can be used, while they are less preferable due to discoloring of accumulated dust inside the thatches.

SUSTAINABILITY OF THE PROJECT
Comparison of initial investment with long term cost reduction benefits
In Semi-arid and semi-humid climate condition of Eritrea it is possible to construct collecting tanks by at least 30% local material. That is because stone and sand of good quality are available near the beneficiaries. It is well possible to
Construct low cost Ferro cement tanks of rectangular or prism shape. The crude cost
Comparison is given below: -
Material
Cost In Nakfa
Initial Cost of 10m3 Ferro-cement tank
8000 – 9000 Nakfa
Initial cost of 20m3 brick or stone masonry tank
14,000 – 15,000 Nakfa
Cost Recovery at a rate of 5nakfa/m3/family size of 6/per life span.
20 x 219 = 4380 Nakfa
N.B According to Commercial Bank Exchange rate 1USD = 15 Nakfa
Training
Trainings have been given to focus group town dwellers in order to sustain the implementation of the program successfully.
Training mainly focused on:
- Cultural issues related to customs and beliefs of the indigenous society.
- General issues focus on women to participate in every aspect and level because responsibility of carrying water and its economic management has direct impact on their life and health.
- Political issues that involves levels at house hold village committees directly, related offices regional council line ministries, bilateral agencies and international organizations
- Community participations sensitizing that the community in the project.
- Awareness raising by making the communities participate in e.g. water tank construction demonstration and extension campaigns on the technology etc.

POLICY
The water resource department in the ministry of Land water & Environment in consultation (collaboration) with the ministry of public works and other line ministries prepared a national directive & Guideline on rain water Harvesting from roof catchments through active participation water law experts engineers, environmentalist and decision makers and by forming relevant committees.
CONCLUSION
The Pilot project was carried out in Zoba Debub administration region mainly in town
Of Mendefera .The pilot experiments under taken so far have prove to be extremely successful and demonstrated very promising result with different Environmental Economic and social benefits.
The future plan is to expand the implementation of Rainwater harvesting through roof catchments approach in all over the country

Friday, November 29, 2013

Afraid of Man?





Salam, 5, an African lion, stands on the branches of a tree at the Ramt Gan safari near Tel Aviv, Israel. Tree-climbing lions are relatively uncommon and are best known for their populations in Uganda's Queen Elizabeth National Park and Tanzania's Lake Manyara National Park. Photo: AP

GO GREEN, LOSING ITS SHEEN?




Often the Truth is an orphan, whereas falsehood'd have many claimants. Truth's attires attract none, whereas falsehood's distract  everyone. Everyone wants to celebrate truth but owns falsehood. Though both these are 'abstracts' in grammar, lies emerge stronger, they breath fresh even in stale conditions and omnipresent in their presence.

For around five decades now the 'green champions' are championing the cause with much failure. Just as I sailed in the prelude to this piece, all of us love to do good things but end up  doing bad things. These actions of us are not intentional but conventional and done for our  convenience. 

Morocco, Milan, Rio, Kyoto, Copenhagen, Warsaw... the cities that hosted these conferences become popular but the messages are  forgotten. Big leaders with bigger entourage raising big hopes land on  these big cities' sky high hotels and conduct their proceedings under roofs that are envied by the real stars in the sky. They burn millions of kilo litres of fossil fuel  and discuss at length how to reduce the burning of fossil fuel. They are there for green but spend kilowatts of electrical  energy and lung energy and discuss how to reduce the use of energy. Just as they are in the cool conference halls, cooling their heels, the AC machines spit heat outside the halls.  

Instead of going and growing green, the concrete jungles are growing  and there is only one difference between these two jungles. Both of them grow: the green jungles grow poorer in their area and the white richer in their area (space and height). 

Good conferences, good ambience, good food, good picnics and finally autographs and new friendships. As they depart to their respective destinations  they carry more in their brown bags and less in their green bags. Good opportunities to meet to reduce meat or heat. But nothing  about 'WARMING' of this Earth, everything about the Charming places to visit. Long Live Green Conclaves!
People are concrete in their thinking and buildings. No change. The colour of the jungles change from green to white. Nothing serious....

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

We can't laugh at the 'laughing gas'




N2O emissions are connected to diverse economic sectors from agriculture, chemical manufacturing and electricity production to waste management, transportation and fish production


Warsaw, 21 November 2013 - Emissions of nitrous oxide (N2O), an often-overlooked yet potent gas, could nearly double by 2050 and thus potentially undermine gains in the ozone layer recovery and exacerbate climate change.
Drawing Down N2O to Protect Climate and the Ozone Layer, a new report by the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), warns that nitrous oxide is now the most important ozone-depleting emission and the third most potent greenhouse gas released into the atmosphere.

While N2O exists naturally in the atmosphere in trace amounts, human activities have increased its concentrations since the industrial revolution.
The UNEP report, produced in conjunction with scientists and experts from more than 35 organizations, points out that with determination and commitment to act it is possible to draw down nitrous oxide emissions.
Reducing N2O emissions has major cost benefits since emissions are connected to diverse economic sectors from agriculture, chemical manufacturing and electricity production to waste management, transportation and fish production.
Gains from emissions reduction will include increased crop and livestock productivity, poverty alleviation, improved human health and reduced environmental degradation.
An earlier study quoted by the report indicated that an across-the-board improvement in nitrogen use efficiency of 20 per cent would cost around US$12 billion annually, but would save around US$23 billion in annual fertilizer costs alone. 
Additional environmental, climate and human benefits could be worth an estimated US$160 billion per annum.
"We need all hands on deck to combat the serious and significant increases in N2O levels in the atmosphere", said UN Under-Secretary-General and UNEP Executive Director Achim Steiner. "UNEP is working on a range of fronts to support the international efforts under the UN Climate Convention, from catalyzing the uptake of renewable energies and energy efficiency to adaptation projects in many parts of the globe."
"In addition UNEP is working through a myriad of voluntary pathways from accelerating the policy switches towards an inclusive, resource-efficient green economy to  the Climate and Clean Air Coalition to reduce emissions of climate pollutants such as hydroflourocarbons (HFCs), methane and black carbon," said Mr Steiner. 
"Although not as prevalent in the atmosphere as CO2 in terms of mass, N2O - commonly known to many as 'laughing gas' - is far from a laughing matter in respect to climate and ozone damage as it has a disproportionate impact on global warming because of its radiative properties and long lifetime in the atmosphere, which is 120 years on average. Action on these emissions offer yet another opportunity to keep the world under a 2 degree C temperature rise," he added.

Most of the depletion of the stratospheric ozone layer up to now has been due to the infamous Chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs) and other halogenated (chlorine- and bromine-containing) chemicals. 
However, these chemicals - unlike N2O - are now widely controlled by the Montreal Protocol, an international Treaty designed to protect the ozone layer. 
Agriculture is by far the largest source of human-induced N2O emissions, accounting for two-thirds of these emissions. Meanwhile, other important sources of N2O include industry and fossil fuel combustion, biomass burning and wastewater. 
The report lists specific, actionable measures that can be taken in each of these areas.
Agricultural Emissions
Emissions can be reduced by boosting the overall nitrogen use efficiency of agriculture. This means improving the ability of crops and livestock to better utilize nitrogen, and minimizing the loss of nitrogen to the environment that occurs during crop cultivation and animal production.  
Other options for reducing agricultural emissions of N2O include reducing excessive meat consumption - as the production of animal protein leads to higher N2O emissions than plant protein - and reducing food waste and loss. 
As a considerable percentage of food produced is either lost or wasted, avoiding such wastage could reduce the amount of food that needs to be produced and, therefore, the emissions associated with its production. UNEP, through its joint campaign with the FAO, Think.Eat.Save: Reduce Your Foodprint, is working to reduce food waste. 
Controlling Emissions from the Industrial Sector
The report suggests that significant gains can be achieved by controlling emissions from just two chemical industries - adipic acid and nitric acid - which account for about 5 per cent of global N2O emissions. 
Such reductions can be achieved by installing emissions control equipment in facilities producing such chemicals.
Reducing Emissions from Biomass Burning
In the area of biomass burning, the report notes that N2O emissions from landscape fires can be achieved by reducing the use of fires for forest clearing and implementing prescribed burning to reduce the amount of burnable vegetation in natural fires.
Improving the fuel and combustion efficiency of stoves can reduce emissions from biomass-burning in household stoves.
Wastewater and Aquaculture
Interventions in the collection and treatment of wastewater can reduce N2O emissions to the atmosphere.
These include, in particular, lowering the nitrogen content of discharge wastewater through improved wastewater treatment, reducing wastewater leakage from sewage piping, and recycling nutrients in wastewater as fertilizer.
Emissions from aquaculture can be lowered by boosting overall nitrogen use efficiency, and by implementing fish farming systems that reduce the amount of waste generated, or by treating effluents from fish ponds. 
N2O Mitigation Scenarios
The report assesses different sets of scenarios that correspond to different levels of potential N2O mitigation: 


  • Under the business-as-usual scenarios, with little or no mitigation, levels of N2O could increase on average by 83 per cent between 2005 and 2050;
  • The moderate mitigation scenarios have emissions that increase but more slowly than business-as-usual. Under these scenarios, levels of N2O could increase on the average by 26 per cent between 2005 and 2050;
  • Under the concerted mitigation scenarios, N2O emission levels could be 22 per cent lower in 2050 than in 2005.

A reduction in N2O levels, as seen in the concerted mitigation scenarios, will not only help to protect the ozone layer and bring climate benefits, but also have many other co-benefits.
Reducing N2O emissions will help protect the ozone layer 
Rising levels of N2O may undermine the gains in ozone layer recovery achieved by drawing down CFC and other ozone depleting substances. Reducing emissions will help avoid the continued depletion of the ozone layer and secure the gains made by the Montreal Protocol. 
Emissions to be avoided by the concerted mitigation scenarios between 2013 and 2050 are of comparable magnitude to the 1550 to 2350 kilotonnes of ozone depletion potential of CFCs estimated to be locked up in the stocks of old refrigerators, air conditioners, insulation foams, and other units that have already been manufactured and used, but not yet released to the atmosphere.
Climate Benefits 
According to the UNEP Emissions Gap Report 2013, there will be an "emissions gap" of around 8 to 12 gigatonnes of CO2 equivalent (GtCO2eq) in 2020. Drawing down N2O can make a significant contribution to narrowing this gap.
The potential to reduce N2O emissions in 2020 is around 1.8 Tg N2O-N/yr. In units of equivalent CO2 emissions, this is about 0.8 GtCO2eq/yr, which is around 8 per cent of the emissions gap.
Moreover, continued N2O emissions will worsen anthropogenic climate change and the effects will persist for a century or longer even when emissions are reduced in the future.  
Overcoming Barriers  
Cost, capacity building, technology transfer, and the lack of know-how are among the barriers to implementing N2O reduction strategies at a global scale.
Possible actions to overcome such barriers involve a combination of regulatory, financial and voluntary approaches. These include:


  • Removing subsidies that encourage the overuse or misuse of nitrogen fertilizer and other products, while providing incentives for adopting best management practices that would improve nitrogen use efficiency; 


  • Putting a price tag on nitrogen pollution through appropriate levies, incentives and tradable permits;


  • Encouraging research and development geared towards the development of innovative techniques to enhance nitrogen use efficiency as well as increased crop and animal productivity in agriculture and other sectors;


  • Increasing support for good nutrient management practices in crop and livestock operations through education, extension and outreach, especially to farmers in developing countries; 


  • Setting clear targets for N2O emission reductions and for improving nitrogen use efficiency, and putting in place strategies for tracking progress.

Warsaw international mechanism for loss and damage associated with climate change impacts



The Conference of the Parties,
Recalling the relevant provisions of the Convention,
Also recalling decisions 1/CP.16, 7/CP.17 and 3/CP.18,
Acknowledging the contribution of adaptation and risk management strategies
towards addressing loss and damage associated with climate change impacts,
Also acknowledging that loss and damage associated with the adverse effects of
climate change includes, and in some cases involves more than, that which can be reduced
by adaptation,
Recalling its decision to establish, at its nineteenth session, institutional
arrangements, such as an international mechanism, including functions and modalities, to
address loss and damage associated with the impacts of climate change in developing
countries that are particularly vulnerable to the adverse effects of climate change,

1. Establishes the Warsaw international mechanism for loss and damage, under the
Cancun Adaptation Framework, subject to review at the twenty-second session of the
Conference of the Parties (November¡VDecember 2016) pursuant to paragraph 15 below, to
address loss and damage associated with impacts of climate change, including extreme
events and slow onset events, in developing countries that are particularly vulnerable to the
adverse effects of climate change (hereinafter referred to as the Warsaw international
mechanism), and in line with the provisions contained in paragraphs 2ƒ{15 below;
2. Establishes an executive committee of the Warsaw international mechanism, which
shall function under the guidance of, and be accountable to, the Conference of the Parties,
to guide the implementation of functions referred to under paragraph 5 below;
3. Requests the executive committee to report annually to the Conference of the Parties
through the Subsidiary Body of Scientific Technological Advice and the Subsidiary Body
for Implementation and make recommendations, as appropriate;
4. Decides that, as an interim measure, the executive committee shall consist of two
representatives from each of the following bodies under the Convention; ensuring that there
is a balanced representation between developed and developing country Parties: the
Adaptation Committee, the Least Developed Countries Expert Group, the Standing
Committee on Finance, the Technology Executive Committee and the Consultative Group
of Experts on National Communications from Parties not included in Annex I to the
Convention;
5. Further decides that the Warsaw international mechanism shall fulfil the role under
the Convention of promoting the implementation of approaches to address loss and damage
associated with the adverse effects of climate change, pursuant to decision 3/CP.18, in a
comprehensive, integrated and coherent manner by undertaking, inter alia, the following
functions:
1 Decision 3/CP.18, paragraph 9.
Advance unedited version
2
(a) Enhancing knowledge and understanding of comprehensive risk management
approaches to address loss and damage associated with the adverse effects of climate
change, including slow onset impacts, by facilitating and promoting:
(i) Action to address gaps in the understanding of and expertise in approaches to
address loss and damage associated with the adverse effects of climate change,
including, inter alia, the areas outlined in decision 3/CP.18, paragraph 7(a);
(ii) Collection, sharing, management and use of relevant data and information,
including gender-disaggregated data;
(iii) Provision of overviews of best practices, challenges, experiences and lessons
learned in undertaking approaches to address loss and damage;
(b) Strengthening dialogue, coordination, coherence and synergies among
relevant stakeholders by:
(i) Providing leadership and coordination and, as and where appropriate,
oversight under the Convention, on the assessment and implementation of
approaches to address loss and damage associated with the impacts of climate
change from extreme events and slow onset events associated with the adverse
effects of climate change;
(ii) Fostering dialogue, coordination, coherence and synergies among all relevant
stakeholders, institutions, bodies, processes and initiatives outside the Convention,
with a view to promoting cooperation and collaboration across relevant work and
activities at all levels;2
(c) Enhancing action and support, including finance, technology and capacitybuilding,
to address loss and damage associated with the adverse effects of climate change,
so as to enable countries to undertake actions pursuant to decision 3/CP.18, paragraph 6,
including by:
(i) Provision of technical support and guidance on approaches to address loss
and damage associated with climate change impacts, including extreme events and
slow onset events;
(ii) Provision of information and recommendations for consideration by the
Conference of the Parties when providing guidance relevant to reducing the risks of
loss and damage, where necessary, addressing loss and damage, including to the
operating entities of the financial mechanism of the Convention, as appropriate;
(iii) Facilitating the mobilization and securing of expertise, and enhancement of
support, including finance, technology and capacity-building, to strengthen existing
approaches and, where necessary, facilitate the development and implementation of
additional approaches to address loss and damage associated with climate change
impacts, including extreme weather events and slow onset events;
6. Decides that the Warsaw international mechanism should complement, draw upon
the work of and involve, as appropriate, existing bodies and expert groups under the
Convention as well as on that of relevant organizations and expert bodies outside the
Convention, at all levels;
7. Also decides that, in exercising the functions outlined in paragraph 5 above, the
Warsaw international mechanism will, inter alia:
(a) Facilitate support of actions to address loss and damage;
(b) Improve coordination of the relevant work of existing bodies under the
Convention;
2 All levels refer to national, regional and international levels.
Advance unedited version
3
(c) Convene meetings of relevant experts and stakeholders;
(d) Promote the development of, and compile, analyse, synthesize and review
information;
(e) Provide technical guidance and support;
(f) Make recommendations, as appropriate, on how to enhance engagement,
actions and coherence under and outside the Convention, including on how to mobilize
resources and expertise at different levels;
8. Invites the Executive Secretary, in consultation with the President of the Conference
of the Parties, to convene the initial meeting of the executive committee by March 2014, the
meetings of which will be open to observers, and invite representatives of relevant
international and regional organizations having the necessary skills in approaches to
addressing loss and damage associated with the adverse effects of climate change, including
extreme weather events and slow onset events;
9. Requests the executive committee to develop its initial two-year workplan for the
implementation of the functions outlined in paragraph 5 above, including the scheduling of
meetings, taking into account the issues outlined in decision 3/CP.18, paragraphs 6 and 7,
for consideration at the forty-first sessions of the Subsidiary Body for Scientific and
Technological Advice and the Subsidiary Body for Implementation (December 2014);
10. Requests the Subsidiary Body for Scientific and Technological Advice and the
Subsidiary Body for Implementation to consider the composition of, and procedures for, the
executive committee, and to make recommendations thereon for adoption by the
Conference of the Parties at its twentieth session (December 2014), with a view to
finalizing the organization and governance of the executive committee;
11. Invites relevant international and regional organizations, institutions and processes
to integrate, where appropriate, measures to address the impacts of climate change and to
explore and strengthen synergies in the context of addressing loss and damage associated
with the adverse impacts of climate change, especially in particularly vulnerable developing
countries;
12. Also invites Parties to work through the United Nations and other relevant
institutions, specialized agencies and processes, as appropriate, to promote coherence at all
levels in approaches relevant to addressing loss and damage associated with the adverse
effects of climate change, including extreme events and slow onset events;
13. Further invites Parties to strengthen and, where appropriate, develop institutions and
networks at the regional and national levels, especially in particularly vulnerable
developing countries, to enhance the implementation of relevant approaches to addressing
loss and damage in a manner that is country-driven, encourages cooperation and
coordination between relevant stakeholders and improves the flow of information;
14. Requests developed country Parties to provide developing country Parties with
finance, technology and capacity-building, in accordance with decision 1/CP.16 and other
relevant decisions of the Conference of the Parties;
15. Decides to review the Warsaw international mechanism, including its structure,
mandate and effectiveness, at the twenty-second session of the Conference of the Parties,
with a view to adopting an appropriate decision on the outcome of this review;
16. Takes note of the budgetary implications of the activities to be undertaken by the
secretariat pursuant to the provisions contained in this decision;
17. Request that the actions of the secretariat called for in this decision be undertaken
subject to the availability of financial resources.

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

TIME TO BID GOOD BYE TO THE RUDE CRUDE

 

Since the 19th century the  course of history is chiefly decided by the flow of crude oil. The nations gifted with this black gold made rich haul  of yellow gold and has been  sitting  pretty while the buying nations are at the receiving end. The global economy started to increasingly  depend more and more on this oil and most nations  get  burnt   with their oil import bill. Apart from hurting the poor nations hard, the emissions they release is causing  this pollution and we all have started to realize the evil effects of burning the fossil fuel.

But the nature has gifted us with abundant sunlight that can power this earth for millions of years. The need of the hour is to harness as much as electrical energy form this solar energy. We don't need any other form of energy even in -winter rich countries' as all these countries can import the power from their neighbors which get enough sun light. 

Already we are operating  at least 10% of our  surface transport vehicles on electrical energy, that includes the trains. Now we have to maximize the use of electrically operated two and four wheelers at the earliest.    The more and more we invest on this solar energy the more we are going to get and less we pollute this beautiful earth. Let all our researches be on harnessing soalr energy from this moment. 


An electric car is an automobile that is propelled by one electric motor or more, using electrical energy stored in batteries or another energy storage device. Electric motors give electric cars instant torque, creating strong and smooth acceleration.
Electric cars were popular in the late 19th century and early 20th century, until advances ininternal combustion engine technology and mass production of cheaper gasoline vehicles led to a decline in the use of electric drive vehicles. The energy crises of the 1970s and 1980s brought a short-lived interest in electric cars; although, those cars did not reach the mass marketing stage, as is the case in the 21st century. Since 2008, a renaissance in electric vehicle manufacturing has occurred due to advances in battery and power management technologies, concerns about increasing oil prices, and the need to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Monday, November 25, 2013

NEED NOT DIG DEEP IN THE FUTURE FOR CRUDE



Illinois ethanol plant to add bio-diesel capabilities





US-based Adkins Energy has been awarded a $500,000 (€371,945) Rural Energy for America Programme (REAP) grant to begin construction on a $4.5 million biodiesel plant on the east side of its Illinois campus.
The 2 million gallon facility is expected to begin production in spring 2014. The company’s ethanol arm currently produces 1.5 million gallons of distillers corn oil a year, which is sold either into the biodiesel production market or as a supplement to the animal feed market.
Adkins will use this feedstock to produce the biodiesel in its facility, a process which will be fully integrated into existing ethanol operations. WB Services, in Kansas, is to partner with Adkins on the project.
‘We are thankful that the US Department of Agriculture sees the value in this project,’ says Adkins Energy GM Ray Baker. ‘This project is another example of how the Renewable Fuel Standard (RFS) is working; it is encouraging continued investment in advanced bio-refineries and creating new jobs.’
The new plant will cover around 8,500sq ft but Adkins says it will be designed so that more equipment could be added to double production capabilities if opportunity allows.

NEWS AND PHOTO: BIOFUELS-NEWS

Sunday, November 24, 2013

LET THEM HAVE TOILETS

6 - billion people have mobiles but only 4.5 billion people have access to toilets. The nuclear and cultural super powers of the world,   India and Pakistan alone account for 626 million and 40 million respectively. The major cause of diseases among humans and for our Earth  is this in sanitation.  If these ultra nuclear powers invest one tenth of  their defense budget on this crucial sector, they can come out of this ignominy. But as usual the rich only plans for the poor. Which rich will speak for a poor man? The rich and the poor stay disconnected.  The poor and the rich watch each other only through televisions. The ultra rich's haunting places are far off for a poor man. The only connect is both they share the  same earth- of course- one on the soil and the other in the sky. LONG LIVE NUCLEAR POWERS!


Thanks PEPSI & COKE!
You made our burden lighter.We have to carry a brass or aluminium or tin container as we sat beside the rail tracks in the morning hours. But the empty bottles of your soft drinks help a lot.



UN Photo/Patricia Esteve

19 November 2013 – With its first official observance of World Toilet Day, the United Nations today called on the international community to help break taboos around toilets, which are still out of reach to more than one-third of the global population, and make sanitation a global development priority.
“Despite the compelling moral and economic case for action on sanitation, progress has been too little and too slow,” Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said in his message for the Day, noting that sanitation is central to human and environmental health, and essential for sustainable development, dignity and opportunity.
Of the eight anti-poverty targets known as the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), the sanitation target is the most off-track with more than 80 per cent of countries behind in the national targets that they set.
While six billion people worldwide have mobile phones, only 4.5 billion have access to toilets or latrines – meaning that 2.5 billion people, mostly in rural areas, do not have proper sanitation, according to UN figures. In addition, 1.1 billion people still defecate in the open.
According to a joint UNICEF and World Health Organization report this year, the largest number of these people are in India (626 million), followed by Indonesia (63 million), Pakistan (40 million), Ethiopia (38 million), and Nigeria (34 million).
‘Without access to improved sanitation’ is a “euphemism to describe the undignified life of billions of people”, said Catarina de Albuquerque, the UN Special Rapporteur on the human right to safe drinking water and sanitation. “I am disappointed with the slow and insufficient progress in providing these services despite the significant political and legal commitments understand in the last years.”
Poor water and sanitation cost developing countries around $260 billion a year - 1.5 per cent of their gross domestic product (GDP), the UN reported, while every dollar invested could bring a five-fold return by keeping people healthy and productive.
Earlier this year, Mr. Ban launched a Call to Action on Sanitation to end open defecation by 2025 and build on existing efforts, such as Sanitation and Water for All and the Sanitation Drive to 2015, the date to reach the MDGs.
“Sometimes it’s a topic that we joke about. But if 20 school buses crashed on First Avenue today, I would guarantee that there would be a response,” Theresa Dooley, Senior Advisor, Sanitation and Hygiene at the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) told journalists in New York. “And the reality is that that is the number of children that die each day as a direct result of not having access to sanitation.”
An estimated 1,400 children under the age of five years old die each year as a result of diarrhoea directly linked to a lack of access to safe water, sanitation and hygiene.
Despite the figures, more needs to be done to bring the “taboo subject” of toilets and open defecation from the shadows, discuss it frankly, and agree on tackling the problem, the UN official said.
Journalists also heard from Karen Tan, Permanent Representative of Singapore, which had been instrumental in galvanizing support within the General Assembly to designate 19 November as World Toilet Day.
More than 100 Member States co-sponsored the resolution ahead of its July adoption, Ms. Tan said, significant of the “universal recognition to act on this need and representing a new universal commitment.”
Adopting the resolution, the 193-member Assembly urged UN Member States and relevant stakeholders to encourage behavioural change and the implementation of policies to increase access to sanitation among the poor, along with a call to end the practice of open-air defecation, which it deemed “extremely harmful” to public health.
The resolution also recognizes the role that civil society and non-governmental organizations play in raising awareness of this issue. It also calls on countries to approach sanitation in a much broader context that includes hygiene promotion, the provision of basic sanitation services, and sewerage and wastewater treatment and reuse in the context of integrated water management.
Later today at the UN Headquarters in New York, the Permanent Mission of Singapore to the UN will organize a seminar with participation of the Office of the current President of the General Assembly, on challenges of sanitation.
World Toilet Day has previously been marked by international and civil society organizations all over the world. However, it was not formally recognized as an official UN day until this year.



Saturday, November 23, 2013

AGAIN ROADS OF DEATHS



Once upon a time and long long ago and no body can say how long ago, the roads were used for journey.

Today they are the only open spaces available for any work that is carried out in the open. Let us see how we misuse and abuse and overuse our roads.
1. The cables of electric and satellite channels pass through the arterial roads and every road
2. Water and drainage pipes
3. Oil pipe lines

Out of all these the oil pipe lines are the most dangerous. ( crude or kind ... I don't know) . They are literally live bombs that will explode and impact very heavy damages. A single spark on a leak is sufficient to erase millions of men habitations and trillions of dollars of wealth. The explosions in China is a point. Let us be more prudent in handling this crude-crude. When the intelligence agencies carry out searches for a single pipe bomb fearing attacks, how can we leave hundreds of kilometers of pipe bombs unprotected? It is natural corrosion and erosion would be there apart from the threats. Should we all sit or travel on a live bomb?

Dear planners,
Don't lay  any oil  pipe lines on roads.

A woman runs near a damaged street following the pipeline explosion in Qingdao

PHOTO : BBC



PHOTO: ALJAZEERA 

NATURE IN NATURE IS ATTRACTIVE





Starlings blacken the sky above the Mediterranean sea in Nice, France.(AP/Lionel Cironneau)






EVEN AN ELEPHANT CAN BE EATEN BY ANTS


Seas at risk : A shoal of fish and healthy coral are seen off Punta Cana, the Dominican Republic. Scientists are concerned about ocean acidification, which endangers marine ecosystems. | AP

Ocean acid-ification may double by 2100: study

BY ALEX MORALES

Ocean acidity is likely to more than double by 2100 because of fossil-fuel pollution, putting fisheries at risk and diminishing the capacity of the seas to absorb carbon-dioxide emissions, a study showed.
The seas have already acidified by 26 percent since industrialization began two centuries ago, and a continuation of current trends may lead to a 170 percent increase in acid levels by the end of the century, according to the study released at the U.N. climate talks in Warsaw on Nov. 18.
A study earlier this year showed oceans — which absorb carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, forming carbonic acid — are acidifying at their fastest pace in 300 million years. Because the level of acidity can affect the ability of creatures to form shells, the resulting damage could cost the shellfish industry $130 billion a year, according to the UNESCO study.
“Substantial changes in marine ecosystems are expected and they are likely to have a major socioeconomic impact,” the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization said in a statement. “This phenomenon is all the more worrying in view of other threats to marine ecosystems such as rising water temperatures, over fishing and pollution.”
The oceans absorb about a quarter of carbon-dioxide emissions from human activity, according to the researchers. As its acidity increases, its ability to absorb the gas diminishes, threatening to heighten global warming because more heat-trapping carbon dioxide will remain in the atmosphere, they said.


“If we don’t do something about it and we follow a high CO2 scenario, we will see both global warming and the acidification of the oceans,” said Carol Turley, a senior scientist at the Plymouth Marine Laboratory in southwestern England.


ROADS THAT LEAD TO DEATH; JOURNEYS ENDING UP AS FINAL JOURNEY

MOM, BELIEVE ME MOM.

I KNOW  YOU TAUGHT ME TO WALK
AND CYCLE IN OUR GARDEN.

MOM, I CAN RECALL THE SMILES ON THE
FACES OF DAD AND YOU AS I PEDALED THE
TWO WHEELED WONDER  FOR THE FIRST TIME

I KNOW YOU WOULD BLOCK ME FROM GOING TO
THE ROAD WINDING BEFORE OUR HOUSE
EVERY TIME I TOOK THE CYCLE

YES I CRIED TO POSSESS A CAR
WHICH I CAN DRIVE IN THE HALL
YEAH, IT WAS THE FIRST TOY
I GOT TO ENJOY AND I WAS IN A DREAM WORLD 

BUT MOM , YOU DIDN'T TELL ME THESE BIG CARS
WOULD TAKE ME TO THE NEXT WORLD

MOM, YOU'D TAKE ME TO THE PADDY FIELDS
ON A RAINY DAY AND I WOULD TALK
TO THE BUTTERFLIES  AND YOU TAUGHT ME
TO CATCH THEM AND LEAVE THEM SAFE

MOM, YOU TAUGHT ME HISTORY
WHERE I LEARNT OF BATTLEFIELDS
OF YESTERYEAR'S   AND SHED TEARS
MOM, WHY DIDN'T  YOU TELL ME THAT
THE ROADS ARE  THE REAL BATTLE FIELDS?
MOM, WHY DID N'T YOU TELL ME
THESE VEHICLES ARE  METAL MONSTERS?

MOM, I THOUGHT I'D REACH HOME
IN AN HOUR AND GO FOR A SHOWER
BUT  I HEAR MOM, THE MEDIC TALKS OF
 AN HOUR OF LIFE LEFT IN ME MOM,

I CAN'T TALK AS I CAN'T OPEN MY MOUTH
I CAN'T SEE AS MY EYE LIDS  ARE SEALED
I CAN'T MOVE AS MY LIMBS ARE FROZEN
BUT I CAN HEAR ALL... WILL YOU BE HERE MOM 
BY THE SIDE OF ME NOW? 

YOU TALKED OF TALKING TO ME
WHEN I WAS INSIDE YOUR WOMB
WHY CAN'T YOU TALK TO ME NOW AND 
AT THIS MOMENT...
MOM, WHY DID YOU THROW ME OUT
AND NOW I'M TO THE TOMB?

O.K  MOM,  WILL YOU PLEASE TELL ALL WOMEN 
NOT TO THROW ANY BABY OUT
IN FUTURE ... IN TO THIS WORLD
THAT HURTS AND HURTS AND HURTS
OF ALL GOOD HEARTS...







Every 3 minutes, an Indian dies in a road accident.



The maximum fatalities next to natural deaths!  Is there any one in India who will listen to me?  Sure. There would be none.  The pain is for others and not for me. Drink and drive and drive others to death. Let us celebrate cinema, politics, corruption and now the violence against woman. Normally the poor only dies on our roads and train crashes; the rich travel  by air. 

Ponder over!

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), road traffic injuries are the sixth leading cause of death in India with a greater share of hospitalization, deaths, disabilities and socio-economic losses in the young and middle-aged population. Road traffic injuries also place a huge burden on the health sector in terms of pre-hospital and acute care and rehabilitation.

In the year 2011 alone 4,97,686 road accidents took place and out of it  1,21,618 were fatal.   1,42,485 people lost their lives in this single year  and 5,11,394 persons were seriously injured.  The number of deaths  in air crashes during the same period-NONE.
The rich are safe. Then why should they bother about the poor  road users? Let us build more and more swanky airports to be appreciated by the guests from foreign countries and to allow our rich to enjoy. The entire airport of millions of square feet -air condition them. They can't carry their little bags. Provide sleek trolleys  and allow them push gently. They can't walk with their feet. They are winged creatures on earth- unfortunately!  Provide them elevators, escalators and walkalators and gliders.
Elimination of the poor is one of the ways of eliminating poverty indeed! 

Long live the elite!
Mom, Believe Me  Mom. 

I went to a party, Mom,
I remembered what you said.
You told me not to drink, Mom,
So I drank soda instead.

I really felt proud inside, Mom,
The way you said I would.
I didn't drink and drive, Mom,
Even though the others said I should.

I know I did the right thing, Mom,
I know you are always right.
Now the party is finally ending, Mom,
As everyone is driving out of sight.

As I got into my car, Mom,
I knew I'd get home in one piece.
Because of the way you raised me,
So responsible and sweet.

I started to drive away, Mom,
But as I pulled out into the road,
The other car didn't see me, Mom,
And hit me like a load.

As I lay there on the pavement, Mom,
I hear the policeman say,
"The other guy is drunk," Mom,
And now I'm the one who will pay.

I'm lying here dying, Mom...
I wish you'd get here soon.
How could this happen to me, Mom?
My life just burst like a balloon.

There is blood all around me, Mom,
And most of it is mine.
I hear the medic say, Mom,
I'll die in a short time.

I just wanted to tell you, Mom,
I swear I didn't drink.
It was the others, Mom.
The others didn't think.

He was probably at the same party as I.
The only difference is, he drank
And I will die.

Why do people drink, Mom?
It can ruin your whole life.
I'm feeling sharp pains now.
Pains just like a knife.

The guy who hit me is walking, Mom,
And I don't think it's fair.
I'm lying here dying
And all he can do is stare.

Tell my brother not to cry, Mom.
Tell Daddy to be brave.
And when I go to heaven, Mom,
Put "Daddy's Girl" on my grave.

Someone should have told him, Mom,
Not to drink and drive.
If only they had told him, Mom,
I would still be alive.

My breath is getting shorter, Mom.
I'm becoming very scared.
Please don't cry for me, Mom.
When I needed you,
you were always there.

I have one last question, Mom.
Before I say good bye.
I didn't drink and drive,
So why am I the one to die?