Monthly Archives: March 2017

Ecologist Special Report: World’ rarest dolphin heading towards extinction

When Liz Slooten and Steve Dawson graduated from university in New Zealand in 1982, they became interested in the country’s diminutive endemic dolphins, about which only six scientific papers had been written. A summation of all that was known about them was all of four pages long.

The New Zealand coastal dolphins, which have relatives in Chile, Argentina and South Africa, are the world’s smallest. They are friendly to people, fight rarely and have sex often. One sub-species, which hadn’t bred with the others for 16,000 years, according to a mitochondrial DNA analysis, is called the Maui’s dolphin,

When Slooten and Dawson decided to make the dolphins the centerpiece of their doctoral theses, they had no idea that 30 years later, fishermen’s nets would have reduced the Mauis to some 60 individuals, from 2,000 or so in the 1970s, making it the world’s rarest dolphin. The others, which are slightly smaller, are called Hector’s dolphins, and fishing nets have brought them down from 50,000 to 10,000, according to one estimate (New Zealand also has 11 species of non-endemic oceanic dolphins).

Slooten, tall and energetic, and Dawson, whose blue eyes are as piercing as his wit, never married, complete each other’s sentences and seem to do everything together. They made the dolphins the centerpiece of their doctorates at the University of Canterbury and later of their research as professors at Otago University in Dunedin, the southernmost university in the world. Together, they have published over 90 scientific peer-reviewed papers on the dolphins, more than anyone else.

In 1984, they set out in a four-meter inflatable dinghy for a six-month survey of 8,300 km of coastline to determine the dolphins’ distribution. In the late 1990s, they repeated the survey with a 15-meter sailing catamaran equipped with a crow’s nest. Each specialized in a different aspect of the dolphin: Liz on the dolphins’ behavior and breeding; Steve on the sounds they make and how they use them to communicate. He also photographs them and has compiled a data base of more than 400 dolphins recognizable by dents in their signature round dorsal fins or scars and markings on the upper bodies.

When they started their doctoral research, they noticed dead dolphins were washing up on beaches with clear gill-net markings. So as part of his research, Dawson interviewed fishermen every month about their dolphin interactions, and asked them bring their bodies for dissection. “We thought that over the four years of our Ph.D.s, we’d dissect maybe 10,” he said. “Instead, we got swamped, they brought us 61.” A paper he published in 1990 was the first to describe the extent of the carnage, with some fishermen reporting killing up to 44 a season.

It soon became clear that the dolphin populations diminished faster in the more heavily fished areas. Because they rarely travel for more than 50 km, the casualties are not replaced by members of another group. By 2004, a continuous population of Hectors around the South Island had become fragmented into 10 small groups, some with fewer than 40 individuals.

That’s why one sunny November afternoon, Slooten, Dawson and I found ourselves crisscrossing Akaroa Harbour on their fast dinghy, looking for dolphins to photograph. We saw 10 in several groups. The long and narrow bay, hemmed in by spectacular cliffs that keep out wind and swells, is an ideal place to view the 100 or so dolphins who call it home.

That’s no accident: In 1988, Slooten and Dawson’s research – and more than 6,000 letters from conservation groups and members of the public – persuaded the Labour government to create the first dolphin sanctuary around the South Island’s Banks Peninsula, into which Akaroa Harbour penetrates. It banned commercial gill nets, which rise like invisible curtains from the bottom and are believed to be the main cause of dolphin drownings, and restricted recreational nets.

Over the next three decades, as the numbers of dolphins elsewhere in New Zealand plunged, scientists, environmentalists and, from 2012, the International Whaling commission, urged successive governments to ban trawl and gill nets from all the areas where the Maui dolphins live and allow only fish traps and hook-and-line fisheries, which do not harm cetaceans.

But the result has been a case study of the influence of money and political ideology over conservation.

Every time a Labour government was elected, it would enact some protection, primarily reining in the gillnetters, who are more numerous, less profitable and tend to be owned by individuals. The trawlers, which are mostly owned by relatively large corporations, had the clout to fend off most trawl restrictions. In 2008, Shaun Driscoll, at the time the Fisheries Ministry’s head of investigations, complained in an unpublished report obtained by the Ecologist of an “overbearing and over-powerful fishing industry.”

Every time a National Party government came in, it asserted that protection was working well and saw little need for more restrictions. The fact that the president of the National Party, Peter Goodfellow, also happens to be a main shareholder, board member and former chairman of Sanford Ltd., the country’s biggest seafood company, is often cited as evidence of the close links between the industry and its government regulators.

In the Maui habitat, Sanford uses only trawlers and owns 60 percent of the quota for snapper, the most valuable fish. It has pledged to stop allowing fishermen to sell net-caught snapper from the Maui habitat at the auction houses it owns from April. It has also promised to stop its own ships from trawling in the Maui range by 2022 if it can’t find a way of avoiding dolphin deaths. Scientists say the measure won’t stop the decline of the dolphin population.

The biggest improvement to the dolphins’ prospects came in 2003, at the tail end of five years of Labour rule, when all nets were banned in 5 percent of the Maui’s habitat and gillnets were banned in an additional 14 percent. In 2008, at the end of the last Labour government, similar measures were put in place to protect the South Island’s Hectors. “That made the difference between rapid decline and slow decline,” Slooten explained.

A government-funded study published in 2012 found that the number of Maui dolphins was falling at a rate of 2.8% a year. A more recent study by the same authors put it at 1.5% to 2%. “We do not say that the population has stabilized,” noted lead author Scott Baker of Oregon State University. “The estimated rate of decline has decreased.”

That hasn’t prevented the government, citing the paper, as saying that “Māui numbers over the past five years have stabilized,” in the words of Conservation Minister Maggie Barry.

Opinion polls have shown that 60% of New Zealanders would be more likely to vote for a government that would restrict fishing nets and protect the dolphins and that 63% would be willing to pay more for fish to protect dolphins. NABU, a German charity, has called for an international boycott of New Zealand seafood until the government reverses the dolphins’ decline by banning all nets in its habitat. “Buy New Zealand fish, get dead Maui’s dolphins free,” goes NABU’s slogan.

New Zealand snapper caught in the Maui and Hector habitats is exported to several countries, including the US and the UK, but consumers have no way of knowing exactly where and how they were caught. “If British consumers want to be sure they’re not contributing to the extinction of this rare dolphin, they should avoid New Zealand seafood,” said Barry Torkington, a New Zealand fisheries expert.

The next parliamentary election is in September, after nine years of National Party rule. So far, both Labour and the Greens have backed the recommendation of the International Whaling Commission, the IUCN and dozens of other organizations to ban all nets in the Maui’s 600-km coastal range. The National Party’s position is that existing restrictions are working and there is no need to extend them.

This Author

Christopher Pala is a reporter based in Washington DC

This article was reported in partnership with The Investigative Fund at The Nation Institute in New York.

 

 

Cyprus: time to crack down on Mediterranean’s biggest songbird massacre

A new report highlights research by BirdLife Cyprus and the RSPB, showing that illegal trapping activity on the island remains around its highest ever level.

The use of mist nets, lines of almost invisible netting, to trap birds has risen by 183% since 2002, and 21km of mist nets were in use in the survey area.

And almost half of the trapping is taking place in British territory on the island, in the two ‘Sovereign Base Areas’ (SBAs) used by British armed forces.

Almost half the total length of active net rides, about ten kilometres, are in the Dhekelia SBA on the east of the island, with more than 800,000 birds trapped a year. The principal trapping hotspot is base’s firing range at Cape Pyla.

The birds are killed to provide restaurants with the main ingredient for the local and expensive dish of ambelopoulia, cooked songbirds served as part of a mezze. A plate of 12 fried or grilled songbirds sells for between €40-80.

The Cyprus trappers have become increasingly bold, blatantly and extensively using electronic calling devices on the firing range at night in order to lure in birds to their deaths. These play calls at deafeningly-high volumes, falsely advertising the presence of blackcaps, robins and other songbirds, but also effectively proclaiming the territories of the illegal trappers.

There are now concerns that parts of the British firing range are effectively becoming a no-go area for the committed, but significantly outnumbered, local police force.

One of the worst bird killing grounds in the Mediterranean

Invasive non native acacia trees from Australia were planted on the British base by the trappers, and, as the only cover around, are a great draw for migrating birds to stop off, rest and feed. With the addition of around 20 to 40 tape luring devices in some areas, these leafy corners of the island become irresistible to birds, who arrive in great numbers.

The report estimates that over 1.7 million birds could have been killed within the survey area, which covers both the British base and Cyprus Republic areas, and nearly 2.3 million across the whole of Cyprus due to this extensive bird trapping activity.

The scale of this activity has also been confirmed in a Birdlife report, ‘The Killing‘, published in 2016, in which Cyprus was identified as one of the worst places for illegal bird killing in the entire Mediterranean.

Survey records (in the new report) show that while blackcaps are the main target, 155 bird species have been found trapped in mist nets or on limesticks. Of these, 78 were species of conservation concern including cinereous bunting, pallid harrier, red-footed falcon and turtle dove

The sheer numbers of birds involved here, and the importance of the area for migration, make this a significant conservation issue. Millions of birds migrate south through eastern Europe each autumn, and Cyprus is a natural route for them to take, allowing them to break up their journey over the Mediterranean.

The British military firing range at Cape Pyla is a bottleneck for birds at the southern tip of Cyprus, where they gather before crossing the sea.

Blockade prevents MoD clearing trees planted as lures – on their own land

Removing the acacia trees planted on Ministry of Defence land by the trappers is one of the most effective ways to stop this criminal activity. However the SBA administration were largely forced to abandon this in 2016 as the trappers organised large protests and a dramatic blockade (see photo).

Whereas the Base authorities had successfully removed 54 acres of acacia in the preceding two years, this autumn they were only able to remove a further 7 acres, leaving around 90 acres of this illegal-killing infrastructure still standing on the British firing range.

Organised criminal gangs are driving this illegal activity on a huge scale and it is estimated they earn millions of Euros every year from the songbirds they kill on British territory.

As there is a great deal of money to be made in trapping songbirds, many people on the island have strong vested interests in keeping it going. Many in Cypriot communities feel that this is an important tradition, even though today it is done on an industrial scale.

Understandably these local attitudes place the British Army authorities in a difficult position. The Dhekelia and Akrotiri SBAs comprise a UK Overseas Territory, so the UK has a responsibility for the protection of the wildlife on these sites. While almost all the trapping takes place at Dhekelia, the Akrotiri SBA is also vital for birds: it has a massive salt lake, recognised as a RAMSAR wetland site, which is home to major flamingo flocks.

Cyprus government and British authorities must get tough together!

Between August and October 2016 the small British Sovereign Base Area (SBA) police force, supported by specialist help from RSPB Investigations staff, opened more cases and confiscated more mist net than ever before.

However, the army must also take care to avoid stirring up opposition to British presence in Cyprus. Nevertheless, we do need to see more enforcement support from the Ministry of Defence to ensure the invasive tree removal operation continues.

In addition, the Republic of Cyprus must crack down on black-market restaurants which serve songbirds. Small-scale trapping of birds for human consumption in Cyprus was practiced for many centuries, but it has been illegal on the island for over 40 years, after being outlawed in 1974.

Enforcement against restaurants serving ambelopoulia has been almost non-existent in the last few years, yet as the key driver of this illegal activity it is crucial that urgent action is taken by the Cyprus Government.

 


 

Jamie Wyver works for the RSPB, the UK’s BirdLife partner.

 

Ecologist Special Report: World’ rarest dolphin heading towards extinction

When Liz Slooten and Steve Dawson graduated from university in New Zealand in 1982, they became interested in the country’s diminutive endemic dolphins, about which only six scientific papers had been written. A summation of all that was known about them was all of four pages long.

The New Zealand coastal dolphins, which have relatives in Chile, Argentina and South Africa, are the world’s smallest. They are friendly to people, fight rarely and have sex often. One sub-species, which hadn’t bred with the others for 16,000 years, according to a mitochondrial DNA analysis, is called the Maui’s dolphin,

When Slooten and Dawson decided to make the dolphins the centerpiece of their doctoral theses, they had no idea that 30 years later, fishermen’s nets would have reduced the Mauis to some 60 individuals, from 2,000 or so in the 1970s, making it the world’s rarest dolphin. The others, which are slightly smaller, are called Hector’s dolphins, and fishing nets have brought them down from 50,000 to 10,000, according to one estimate (New Zealand also has 11 species of non-endemic oceanic dolphins).

Slooten, tall and energetic, and Dawson, whose blue eyes are as piercing as his wit, never married, complete each other’s sentences and seem to do everything together. They made the dolphins the centerpiece of their doctorates at the University of Canterbury and later of their research as professors at Otago University in Dunedin, the southernmost university in the world. Together, they have published over 90 scientific peer-reviewed papers on the dolphins, more than anyone else.

In 1984, they set out in a four-meter inflatable dinghy for a six-month survey of 8,300 km of coastline to determine the dolphins’ distribution. In the late 1990s, they repeated the survey with a 15-meter sailing catamaran equipped with a crow’s nest. Each specialized in a different aspect of the dolphin: Liz on the dolphins’ behavior and breeding; Steve on the sounds they make and how they use them to communicate. He also photographs them and has compiled a data base of more than 400 dolphins recognizable by dents in their signature round dorsal fins or scars and markings on the upper bodies.

When they started their doctoral research, they noticed dead dolphins were washing up on beaches with clear gill-net markings. So as part of his research, Dawson interviewed fishermen every month about their dolphin interactions, and asked them bring their bodies for dissection. “We thought that over the four years of our Ph.D.s, we’d dissect maybe 10,” he said. “Instead, we got swamped, they brought us 61.” A paper he published in 1990 was the first to describe the extent of the carnage, with some fishermen reporting killing up to 44 a season.

It soon became clear that the dolphin populations diminished faster in the more heavily fished areas. Because they rarely travel for more than 50 km, the casualties are not replaced by members of another group. By 2004, a continuous population of Hectors around the South Island had become fragmented into 10 small groups, some with fewer than 40 individuals.

That’s why one sunny November afternoon, Slooten, Dawson and I found ourselves crisscrossing Akaroa Harbour on their fast dinghy, looking for dolphins to photograph. We saw 10 in several groups. The long and narrow bay, hemmed in by spectacular cliffs that keep out wind and swells, is an ideal place to view the 100 or so dolphins who call it home.

That’s no accident: In 1988, Slooten and Dawson’s research – and more than 6,000 letters from conservation groups and members of the public – persuaded the Labour government to create the first dolphin sanctuary around the South Island’s Banks Peninsula, into which Akaroa Harbour penetrates. It banned commercial gill nets, which rise like invisible curtains from the bottom and are believed to be the main cause of dolphin drownings, and restricted recreational nets.

Over the next three decades, as the numbers of dolphins elsewhere in New Zealand plunged, scientists, environmentalists and, from 2012, the International Whaling commission, urged successive governments to ban trawl and gill nets from all the areas where the Maui dolphins live and allow only fish traps and hook-and-line fisheries, which do not harm cetaceans.

But the result has been a case study of the influence of money and political ideology over conservation.

Every time a Labour government was elected, it would enact some protection, primarily reining in the gillnetters, who are more numerous, less profitable and tend to be owned by individuals. The trawlers, which are mostly owned by relatively large corporations, had the clout to fend off most trawl restrictions. In 2008, Shaun Driscoll, at the time the Fisheries Ministry’s head of investigations, complained in an unpublished report obtained by the Ecologist of an “overbearing and over-powerful fishing industry.”

Every time a National Party government came in, it asserted that protection was working well and saw little need for more restrictions. The fact that the president of the National Party, Peter Goodfellow, also happens to be a main shareholder, board member and former chairman of Sanford Ltd., the country’s biggest seafood company, is often cited as evidence of the close links between the industry and its government regulators.

In the Maui habitat, Sanford uses only trawlers and owns 60 percent of the quota for snapper, the most valuable fish. It has pledged to stop allowing fishermen to sell net-caught snapper from the Maui habitat at the auction houses it owns from April. It has also promised to stop its own ships from trawling in the Maui range by 2022 if it can’t find a way of avoiding dolphin deaths. Scientists say the measure won’t stop the decline of the dolphin population.

The biggest improvement to the dolphins’ prospects came in 2003, at the tail end of five years of Labour rule, when all nets were banned in 5 percent of the Maui’s habitat and gillnets were banned in an additional 14 percent. In 2008, at the end of the last Labour government, similar measures were put in place to protect the South Island’s Hectors. “That made the difference between rapid decline and slow decline,” Slooten explained.

A government-funded study published in 2012 found that the number of Maui dolphins was falling at a rate of 2.8% a year. A more recent study by the same authors put it at 1.5% to 2%. “We do not say that the population has stabilized,” noted lead author Scott Baker of Oregon State University. “The estimated rate of decline has decreased.”

That hasn’t prevented the government, citing the paper, as saying that “Māui numbers over the past five years have stabilized,” in the words of Conservation Minister Maggie Barry.

Opinion polls have shown that 60% of New Zealanders would be more likely to vote for a government that would restrict fishing nets and protect the dolphins and that 63% would be willing to pay more for fish to protect dolphins. NABU, a German charity, has called for an international boycott of New Zealand seafood until the government reverses the dolphins’ decline by banning all nets in its habitat. “Buy New Zealand fish, get dead Maui’s dolphins free,” goes NABU’s slogan.

New Zealand snapper caught in the Maui and Hector habitats is exported to several countries, including the US and the UK, but consumers have no way of knowing exactly where and how they were caught. “If British consumers want to be sure they’re not contributing to the extinction of this rare dolphin, they should avoid New Zealand seafood,” said Barry Torkington, a New Zealand fisheries expert.

The next parliamentary election is in September, after nine years of National Party rule. So far, both Labour and the Greens have backed the recommendation of the International Whaling Commission, the IUCN and dozens of other organizations to ban all nets in the Maui’s 600-km coastal range. The National Party’s position is that existing restrictions are working and there is no need to extend them.

This Author

Christopher Pala is a reporter based in Washington DC

This article was reported in partnership with The Investigative Fund at The Nation Institute in New York.

 

 

Cyprus: time to crack down on Mediterranean’s biggest songbird massacre

A new report highlights research by BirdLife Cyprus and the RSPB, showing that illegal trapping activity on the island remains around its highest ever level.

The use of mist nets, lines of almost invisible netting, to trap birds has risen by 183% since 2002, and 21km of mist nets were in use in the survey area.

And almost half of the trapping is taking place in British territory on the island, in the two ‘Sovereign Base Areas’ (SBAs) used by British armed forces.

Almost half the total length of active net rides, about ten kilometres, are in the Dhekelia SBA on the east of the island, with more than 800,000 birds trapped a year. The principal trapping hotspot is base’s firing range at Cape Pyla.

The birds are killed to provide restaurants with the main ingredient for the local and expensive dish of ambelopoulia, cooked songbirds served as part of a mezze. A plate of 12 fried or grilled songbirds sells for between €40-80.

The Cyprus trappers have become increasingly bold, blatantly and extensively using electronic calling devices on the firing range at night in order to lure in birds to their deaths. These play calls at deafeningly-high volumes, falsely advertising the presence of blackcaps, robins and other songbirds, but also effectively proclaiming the territories of the illegal trappers.

There are now concerns that parts of the British firing range are effectively becoming a no-go area for the committed, but significantly outnumbered, local police force.

One of the worst bird killing grounds in the Mediterranean

Invasive non native acacia trees from Australia were planted on the British base by the trappers, and, as the only cover around, are a great draw for migrating birds to stop off, rest and feed. With the addition of around 20 to 40 tape luring devices in some areas, these leafy corners of the island become irresistible to birds, who arrive in great numbers.

The report estimates that over 1.7 million birds could have been killed within the survey area, which covers both the British base and Cyprus Republic areas, and nearly 2.3 million across the whole of Cyprus due to this extensive bird trapping activity.

The scale of this activity has also been confirmed in a Birdlife report, ‘The Killing‘, published in 2016, in which Cyprus was identified as one of the worst places for illegal bird killing in the entire Mediterranean.

Survey records (in the new report) show that while blackcaps are the main target, 155 bird species have been found trapped in mist nets or on limesticks. Of these, 78 were species of conservation concern including cinereous bunting, pallid harrier, red-footed falcon and turtle dove

The sheer numbers of birds involved here, and the importance of the area for migration, make this a significant conservation issue. Millions of birds migrate south through eastern Europe each autumn, and Cyprus is a natural route for them to take, allowing them to break up their journey over the Mediterranean.

The British military firing range at Cape Pyla is a bottleneck for birds at the southern tip of Cyprus, where they gather before crossing the sea.

Blockade prevents MoD clearing trees planted as lures – on their own land

Removing the acacia trees planted on Ministry of Defence land by the trappers is one of the most effective ways to stop this criminal activity. However the SBA administration were largely forced to abandon this in 2016 as the trappers organised large protests and a dramatic blockade (see photo).

Whereas the Base authorities had successfully removed 54 acres of acacia in the preceding two years, this autumn they were only able to remove a further 7 acres, leaving around 90 acres of this illegal-killing infrastructure still standing on the British firing range.

Organised criminal gangs are driving this illegal activity on a huge scale and it is estimated they earn millions of Euros every year from the songbirds they kill on British territory.

As there is a great deal of money to be made in trapping songbirds, many people on the island have strong vested interests in keeping it going. Many in Cypriot communities feel that this is an important tradition, even though today it is done on an industrial scale.

Understandably these local attitudes place the British Army authorities in a difficult position. The Dhekelia and Akrotiri SBAs comprise a UK Overseas Territory, so the UK has a responsibility for the protection of the wildlife on these sites. While almost all the trapping takes place at Dhekelia, the Akrotiri SBA is also vital for birds: it has a massive salt lake, recognised as a RAMSAR wetland site, which is home to major flamingo flocks.

Cyprus government and British authorities must get tough together!

Between August and October 2016 the small British Sovereign Base Area (SBA) police force, supported by specialist help from RSPB Investigations staff, opened more cases and confiscated more mist net than ever before.

However, the army must also take care to avoid stirring up opposition to British presence in Cyprus. Nevertheless, we do need to see more enforcement support from the Ministry of Defence to ensure the invasive tree removal operation continues.

In addition, the Republic of Cyprus must crack down on black-market restaurants which serve songbirds. Small-scale trapping of birds for human consumption in Cyprus was practiced for many centuries, but it has been illegal on the island for over 40 years, after being outlawed in 1974.

Enforcement against restaurants serving ambelopoulia has been almost non-existent in the last few years, yet as the key driver of this illegal activity it is crucial that urgent action is taken by the Cyprus Government.

 


 

Jamie Wyver works for the RSPB, the UK’s BirdLife partner.

 

Measures of poverty and well-being still ignore the environment – this must change

Without nature, humans could be neither healthy nor happy.

And yet the natural world can be completely ransacked without causing even a tiny blip on our usual measures of economic progress or poverty. The Conversation

A major UN environmental meeting recently looked at launching an assessment of the different values that people attribute to nature, and what nature contributes to human societies.

However, these high level discussions will be futile unless our measures of societal progress expand to explicitly include what nature does for human well-being and prosperity, especially for poor people.

Nature matters to people’s well-being in many different ways. It obviously provides us with basic needs such as food, clean air and water, as well as protection from environmental hazards.

There is also a clear relationship with both physical and mental well-being, especially for those who are fortunate enough to have access to green spaces.

Beyond these instrumental roles, there is also evidence from around the world that nature is a more fundamental contributor to people’s sense of self. It is an integral part of what constitutes well-being, captured for some in the awe-inspiring moments when standing on top of a mountain, the breath-taking view of a beautiful river, or in the feeling of freedom associated with traversing a wide open landscape.

The problem with economic indicators

Despite the value we get from nature, our measures of progress and well-being remain much narrower, focused on what is visible and measurable. Gross Domestic Product (GDP) has been the most prominent approach since the end of World War II, with GDP seen as a useful snapshot of the state of the economy and people’s well-being.

What these figures often hide are those things, like the role of nature, that are not measured in the monetary economy, but are an important part of daily life and can be crucial for sustaining future prosperity.

There are alternatives. One that has gained some momentum is the Inclusive Wealth Index, which takes into account broader measures of human and natural well-being – its most recent assessment suggested that conventional GDP figures had greatly exaggerated growth over the period 1992-2010.

In international development, the UN’s Human Development Index and the ‘multidimensional poverty index‘ both recognise a larger set of issues, combining material standards with measures of health and education. But they still do not adequately incorporate the role of nature.

Ignoring nature creates some perverse paradoxes. Measured GDP might actually increase as a consequence of a major environmental disaster, because of the economic activity created by the clean up and repair.

Meanwhile, the environmental losses themselves don’t show up in economic measures. A country could get rich by cutting down all its primary forests (and many have), but the associated loss of habitat and wild species would not feature in national accounts.

Nature matters to our well-being – and must be valued accordingly

Governments continue to make decisions based on a key set of headline figures. These include GDP and per capita income, which reflect economic prosperity, and, in poorer countries, the extent and incidence of poverty.

But we can do better: our ongoing research focuses on developing environmentally-adjusted measures of multidimensional poverty, based on the insight that people are typically poorer when they do not have access to nature.

Our research suggests that failing to consider these missing environmental aspects can result in an incomplete assessment of the multiple dimensions and underlying drivers of poverty. Consequently, the identification of the poor, as well as an understanding of what makes them poor, risks being partial, thereby posing a challenge to addressing poverty adequately.

The current status quo fails people, especially the poor, and threatens future prosperity by undervaluing nature. Those who benefit from the current approaches are typically global elites who profit from environmental destruction (which goes unrecognised).

The losers are those most dependent on nature for their livelihoods and those especially vulnerable to environmental change. Even if nature is valued, it is typically converted into money equivalents, which favours those who are able and willing to parcel out nature into small commoditised bundles, which can then be sold to the highest bidder.

This fails to take into account the views of those who believe that nature matters in other ways or in its own right, who care about the beauty of nature and the sheer joy that it provides to many.

The consequences of neglecting people’s varied views and aspirations have become apparent from recent political events in Europe and the US. Nature matters to our well-being, and people see their relationship with nature in many different ways.

Recognising this is a crucial step towards building a more inclusive, equitable and sustainable society.

 


 

Judith Schleicher is Postdoctoral Researcher in Conservation, Poverty and Wellbeing, University of Cambridge.

Bhaskar Vira is Reader in Political Economy at the Department of Geography and Fellow of Fitzwilliam College; Director, University of Cambridge Conservation Research Institute, University of Cambridge.

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

 

 

Environmental vandalism? Campaigners regroup to stop the Great Downland Sell-Off

Unlike cutting adult social care, or day care provision – uplands, downlands or parks can be an easier option for councils looking to save costs.

However, in one part of the country that is proving to be far from true.

Parcels of land on the South Downs have been up for grabs no fewer than four times since 1994 and each time vociferous and well researched protestors have won the day.

This latest spat has seen the reformation of Keep Our Downs Public. Dave Bangs, a naturalist and author of three books on the Downs and the Weald, is one of the co-founders of the campaign group.

“We’re surviving so far; this is the fourth time we’ve had to defend these public estates. The first time Brighton’s [Lord] Bassam in ‘94 tried to privatise the whole lot. The Tories in Worthing tried to privatise the Downs near Cissbury Ring. We put a stop on that and it’s now been made statutory access land. And now there have been no sales so far in Eastbourne.”

This latest campaign went into vertical take-off, like in Worthing five years before when there was a 350 people demo at Cissbury Ring – this time it was near 400 at Beachy Head.

Eastbourne Borough Council was still looking to sell off the 3,000 acres of farmland surrounding the chalk grasslands there for £25m, until a public vote on the matter earlier this month went against the sale and the council agreed to think again.

“These are struggles against privatisation that can be won,” said Bangs, “and particularly around the country where they are eminently winnable through a cross class coalition. These resources are of valuable to everyone, so you can get very broad alliances of people.”

In Kent, campaigners are battling Thanet Council which agreed to the ‘accelerated’ sell-off of isle properties and land. Twenty-two sites were listed for disposal last year and hundreds more will be considered over the next two.

Ian Driver, a former councillor, described the policy as ‘environmental vandalism’ and within hours of the initial announcement last year for planned sell offs at Broadstairs, more than 770 residents had signed a petition calling for a full public consultation.

In Worcestershire the Tory-led county council is looking to sell-off 6% of its smallholdings estate by 2020. Controversially this includes plots which were originally gifted to soldiers returning from the First World War.

In Leeds, the city council has put up for sale land on the outskirts of the city including land with Tree Preservation Orders at Yeadon as well as farmland at Grange Farm in Colton.

Last year an estimated £130m plus of council land and property was sold by authorities including Cambridgeshire County Council, Hereford County Council (investigated in 2016 after ‘misleading’ tenants in estate sell-offs) Cornwall Council, Coventry City Council and Nottingham City Council.

This coincided with the Cabinet Office’s setting up of a scheme to encourage councils to re-evaluate their properties and land and raise money from sales. It invested £38m in grants for local authorities to access professional advice on how to map  land and produce working asset registers.

With little financial support on their side, Sussex campaigners say the crunch will come this summer with a review of all the East Sussex County Council holdings, including the 6,000 acre Ashdown Forest, Seven Sisters Country Park, Ditchling Common and the Cuckoo Line trail.

“If we can’t hold line then it’s a case of dominos. We need to push East Sussex County Council into a corner so they don’t win. It would be a disaster for Brighton’s Downs, too,” warned Dave Bangs.

The prospects for the long term aren’t promising, especially if you look to the short history of public sector land which began as a consequence of the 70-year agricultural depression (1875-1939) when land values crashed and there was a massive concentration of 1930s ribbon development. This expansion of the ‘urban’ ushered in a new era of landowners as land values went through the floor.

Tracts were purchased on a large scale by this new breed which led to  a doubling in size of London with octopus tentacles reaching out into the suburbs: Betjeman’s Metroland. However, the National Trust was built on the back of all this which was decidedly good for the environment.

Land values haven’t decreased now, despite the collapse of agriculture in the last 20 years and the rise of neo-liberal monetarism. The EU is also a major player here although now we are no longer using new land for food; rather deer farms, vineyards and hobby farms for the well-off.

This current south coast battle is of national significance: if a major part of the public estate is destroyed the prospect for landscape conservation becomes ever more precarious. The countryside could be further opened up to plutocratic predators, including many super-rich foreign investors.

We could end up with countryside reduced to residual ownership by the National Trust, RSPB and others, who by statute can’t sell their land. All local authorities will have long since disbursed their holdings.

In the meantime, despite calling time last year on sales of Brighton’s downland, the City Council commissioned what campaigners termed ‘a highly misleading and inaccurate report’ saying that the only option was to continue with the sales of land next to the Devil’s Dyke at Poynings, and Plumpton Hill. 

The ‘inconsistencies’ raised by Sussex campaigners are mirrored in consultations  countrywide and include a lack of clarity on the amounts of money raised by sales and also a council’s role on open access on statutory designated open access land.

Chris Todd of Brighton and Hove Friends of the Earth (FoE) explained: “The report claimed the sales were needed to fund the Stanmer restoration project [parkland estate] yet only 50% of the sales money is going towards Stanmer, the rest  is being frittered away elsewhere.”

The report estimates that the Plumpton and Poynings sites (92 acres) will garner £360,000, which is less than £4,000 per acre, with the general price of farmland  two to three times that.

Poynings Field is a 25-acre site which lies between the base of the Devil’s Dyke and the edge of Poynings village. It buffers and forms a natural frame around the Dyke and is partly vulnerable to actual built development, if sold. It is a core landscape element, with fossils and traditionally cropped, high-value farmland. 

Plumpton Hill is an SSSI and nationally important wildlife site with Bronze Age burial barrows and breath-taking views north, across the Weald.

A council spokesperson said:  “Their future is safeguarded because of their presence within the South Downs National Park, also ‘statutory designations’ include Plumpton Hill’s classification as a site of special scientific interest.”

However Bangs argues that if this land should ever get into the hands of commercial, private concerns it will be managed in a way diametrically opposed to public access, conservation estates.

“They sell it for housing, industrial and sporting developments, and they ‘milk’ the assets to increase revenues with industrialised farming, minerals quarrying, wind turbines, fracking, ‘posh food’, ‘posh lets’, commercial shooting and recreation, while keeping some favourite bits for their private enjoyment.

“This is the opposite of the conservation estate model. The Wildlife Trusts, City of London Corporation and Woodland Trust et cetera don’t sell their land assets to fund capital projects. They raise funds or make shifts with modified management, if times are hard.

“They keep their lands as a perpetual public responsibility, as Brighton Council has done…through good times and bad.

City Councillors rejected a senior officers’ recommendation to resume the sale of Plumpton Hill and Poynings Field at their last meeting.

 

 

 

 

Pity the poor hounds! Bovine TB, foxhounds and the biosecurity black hole

The news that a major outbreak of bovine Tb had been found in the Kimblewick foxhounds has raised many more questions than answers.

The first question was, of course, how did the hounds get the TB?

The most obvious answer is that they are the victims of the cosy arrangement between farmers and their local hunts whereby the hunts remove any ‘fallen cattle’ carcases which are then fed, raw, to the hounds.

The hunts do this as a service to those farmers whose land they hunt on. The fact that they happily invade any other farmland without permission is ignored. They have done this for many years and neither side seemed to worry about fallen cattle carrying a notifiable and infectious disease.

TB is often diagnosed or confirmed after cattle are slaughtered, in a licensed slaughterhouse. It is doubtful, when the kennelman butchers a carcase, that he has the knowledge to recognise TB lesions for what they are.

It seems that this practice has finally, and publicly, come back to bite them, via the suffering hounds.

So a second and even more important question is: how many other diseases have been spread, to and via the hounds, because of this practice?

Defra says that bTB in dogs is not a notifiable disease. But, when you have up to a third of one large pack of 120 hounds culled because they had bTB, surely that should be notifiable? The rural population should know about it and Defra, instead of being silent about a problem that has gone of for years, should be investigating.

At least Defra has placed the remaining hounds in quarantine rather than destroying them. But whether there will be a full investigation and the results made public is anybody’s guess. Like most government bodies, Defra does not have a good record when it comes to dealing with embarrassing problems.

Now farmers, once happy to rid themselves of dubious fallen cattle, are beginning to consider stopping hunting on their land, witness these comments on The Farming Forum:

“Heard about this some months ago and it got us worried around here , even though they don’t hunt over us anymore they met at a few farms not far away with stock on to the point some are considering not having them on the place anymore. Let’s be honest this could well be the death nail for hunting …”

“If the source of this outbreak does turn out to be an infected carcass, then it could have ramifications for the whole fallen stock collection industry. Local hunts rely on this to feed hounds. Stop that and hunting stops too as hunts will have to buy in their meat.”

“In the last couple of years we had an outbreak Tb4 area, the rest of us were on radius testing for 18 months, but the hunt still hunted in the outbreak area then came round us they just didn’t care.”

“Its cheaper to feed the hounds bought in food rather than fallen stock but who would let them hunt over their land if they didn’t take fallen stock, I would think twice.”

Bovine TB is very much in the news these days, but there have been other notifiable diseases to consider:

Foot and mouth disease. As the 2001 F&M outbreak showed, when many thousands of cattle, sheep and pigs were slaughtered, this is a major fear for farmers. Hunting was banned for the duration to help prevent the spread of the disease, but no worries. Hunts could still feed their hounds, and even be paid for slaughtering infected stock.

The government regulations, as reported in 2001 by the Telegraph, seemed to be so muddled or deliberately contorted, that hunt staff appeared to be slaughtering both F&M and bTB cattle, and then disposing of the bodies. What is curious is that, apart from the Telegraph, no other media apparently took up the story. Did the government sit on the news?

Bovine TB – responsible for the Kimblewick problem. Kimblewick is not in a High Risk Area for bTB, which leads one to ask: how many hunts in the High Risk Areas of the West Country, East and Southwest Wales are sitting on this problem, either unaware of it or hiding it? They certainly have every reason to be worried. Are they now contacting their vets, or is Defra contacting them?

BSE – Bovine spongiform encephalopathy or ‘mad cow disease’. This disease can certainly infect other species and caused new-variant Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (JCD) in people, and FSE in cats.

At the time of the BSE crisis, scrapie, a disease found in sheep, was studied as having a possible link to BSE. So – have scrapie sheep ever been part of the ‘fallen stock’ deal with the hunts?

Another disease reported in hunting hounds which eat fallen cattle is Hound Ataxia. Ask yourself – have you seen any unsteady hounds lately?

The problem with all these conditions, which may or may not be linked, is that when BSE was finally recognised for the serious and dangerous condition it was, and its causes understood, too much time had passed. It is more than likely that hounds were fed on BSE meat. Surely, if infected humans died, hounds must have suffered. Has Defra thought of following this line of inquiry? Was any research carried out?

Brucellosis – an infectious disease, also known as ‘contagious abortion’. It can infect cattle, sheep and goats, pigs and humans. Oh, and dogs. The difficulty with the last is that rare cases (in dogs imported into the UK), become known because they are pets taken to the vets by worried owners.

How much do we really know about the suffering of hounds?

To give you some idea, an Irish study found these conditions in just 52 autopsied foxhounds:

Bovine TB, lung cancer that had spread to lymph nodes, kidney disease, suppurative pneumonia (pus-filled lungs to you and me), hepatitis, peritonitis, various tumours and much more. Many of them had skin ailments, while 48% of the hounds had chronic kidney changes.

Disturbingly, the researchers concluded that these hounds had been culled for reasons other than the painful conditions they were suffering from. It is common practice for hounds to be culled if they persistently wander from the pack, show weakness, unsteadiness or an unwillingness to hunt. The fact that they might be ill and need treatment is not that important.

Hounds have also been found to carry salmonella and botulism. There is nothing like this level of disease in domestic dogs, or to put it in the words of the researchers: “this survey highlights different disease patterns in hounds than are typically observed in pet dogs.”

The more you look, the more worrying things pop up. After my first article on bTB and foxhounds was published, a spokesperson for the Wirral and Cheshire Badger Group sent me this:

“I thought you might be interested to know that I was out and about in Cheshire West this morning and had a very informative conversation with a small holder (kept cattle years ago) re the hunt. I mentioned the recent revelations regarding foxhounds and TB and he said that the majority of the farmers around him hated the hunt and had tried to stop them from coming onto their land due to Neospora.”

So what is Neospora? Cattle become infected by the ingestion of oocysts shed by infected dogs. That can cause the cattle to abort their calves. Nasty, and no wonder farmers are worried. A few hours later I learn that in Sussex there are posters warning of the dangers of Neospora, and recommending dog owners to worm their dogs. And that makes me ask: how often do hunts bother to individually worm all the hounds in their kennels?

You see what I mean when I say that the Kimblewick Hunt has produced many more questions than there are answers. And one of the most pressing problems that has come to the fore concerns the welfare standards for thousands of UK foxhounds.

Yes, foxhounds kill foxes. That is what they are trained to do. But that aside, they are just big, sloppy, friendly dogs that don’t deserve to live what looks to be a painful existence, while possibly spreading disease back to the farms that supplied their diseased food.

For the sake of the hounds, hunting must stop. For the sake of the hounds, hunt kennel conditions and practices must be investigated. It is time to start demanding both answers and action.

 


 

Lesley Docksey is a freelance writer who writes for The Ecologist and other media on the badger cull and other environmental topics; and on political issues for UK and international websites.

Also on The Ecologist

Author’s note: there was some UK research into foxhound diseases involving no less than 444 hounds, but it has never been published in full. More on this intriguing work in a future article.

Action:Contact Defra and ask them to urgently suspend hunting to prevent further outbreak‘ by League Against Cruel Sports.

Will you join the badger patrols this year? Why not contact your local badger group and find out if they run training days. Many badger patrol groups have their own pages on Facebook.

 

UK exporting 67% of plastic waste amid ‘illegal practices’ warnings

The UK exported more of its plastic packaging waste abroad for recycling in 2016 than in any of the three years previously, according to a new analysis by Energydesk.

The data comes as industry insiders warn that waste sent abroad may be incinerated or buried rather than being recycled.

More than two thirds (67%) of plastic packaging waste was exported for recycling in the first three quarters of 2016, up from 61% in the same period the year before and 60% in 2014.

Over 515,000 tonnes of plastic packaging was exported from the UK in the first three quarters of 2016, alone. Much of this was shipped to Asia.

In evidence to a recent government consultation industry experts warn ministers about the unknown fate of exports, which they claim are often exported “illegally for manual sorting in Asia, or being burned for energy recovery”.

The ‘new narcotics’

Others warn that plastic exports could be used as a front to smuggle out other, more hazardous waste.

Insiders are concerned that instead of good quality plastic for recycling, which would be labelled as ‘greenlist’, criminals could be exporting mixed and contaminated refuse labelled as plastic recycling, thus allowing them to avoid paying UK landfill taxes.

In September 2016 Sir James Bevan, chief executive of the Environment Agency called waste crime the “new narcotics”.

Between 2015 and 2016, the Environment Agency stopped 223 waste shipments, though it is not known how many of those purported to contain waste plastic. In the majority of cases the containers were sent back to refuse centres, but in 13 instances ‘enforcement action’ was taken.

Samantha Harding, Litter Programme Director at the Campaign to Protect Rural England told Energydesk:

“It makes no sense – either economic or environmental – to send used plastics out of the country. Collected properly, the recapture, re-use and recycling of these plastics would create jobs and lead to cleaner environments.”

Illegal shipments

Traditionally the UK has exported much of its waste plastic to Europe for burning as Refuse Derived Fuel, or to China for recycling.

However, in 2013 China implemented stricter rules on the quality of plastic it would accept in a project called ‘Operation Green Fence’. As a result more plastic waste is now making its way to Indonesia, Vietnam and Malaysia.

Coincidentally (or perhaps not), the three countries are all significant sources of plastic pollution in our seas and oceans, mainly due to poor waste collections and management. Indonesia comes in at the world number 2 ocean plastic polluters (after China), with Vietnam at number 4 and Malaysia at number 8.

Back in 2013, a report by the Associate Parliamentary Sustainable Resource Group “there remains concern that some shipments of material are being mis-described as being on the greenlist, when they are actually illegal shipments of mixed municipal waste disguised with thin layers of light recyclables such as paper or plastic.”

In the same year the European Commission noted that “significantly lower costs in developing countries for waste treatment and disposal is an important economic driver for illegal waste shipments. These lower costs are mainly a result of less stringent environmental and health regulation than in the EU, and indeed complete side-stepping of controls in some cases.”

Warning signs

The UK plastic waste market is governed by the Producer Responsibility Obligations (Packaging Waste) Regulations 2007, under which recyclers receive a ‘Packaging Recovery Note‘ for each tonne of plastic recovered and turned into a new product, or a ‘Packaging Export Recovery Note’ for each tonne recovered and exported.

When packaging waste is exported the facilities are meant to operate to the same standards as those set in the UK, however checks are inadequate and the regulations are frequently flouted.

Back in 2015, plastics recyclers repeatedly warned Defra about the dangers created by the system in their responses to a consultation on reducing recycling targets. Five different recycling firms, including Waste Transition, ECOTECH and DSmith told Defra of the impact illegal exports were having on the market.

Waste Transition noted that “plastics reprocessing activity in the UK has been declining in recent years with at least six such companies going out of business in the past year.” They go on to note that one of the causes is illegal exports with “much of the UK’s waste plastics are being exported” – often illegally for manual sorting in Asia.

Recycling company PlasRecycle told DEFRA: “the plastics recycling industry in the UK has suffered heavily over the past year with a number of recyclers going out of business, due to a combination of feedstock availability (lack of collection), presence of the disparity between PRN and PERN, lower oil prices and illegal exporting of film feedstock.”

DSmith, a leading provider of corrugated packaging in Europe, said: “Further action is required to address illegal exports of mixed waste. There is a danger that the increased targets will encourage the collection of poor quality material because there are export markets that will take material for further sortation.

“When targets increase, the price of PRNs rise, high PRN prices attract fraud, which distorts the domestic market.” 

 


 

Maeve McClenaghan is a freelance journalist and Senior Investigator for Greenpeace UK whose reports regularly feature on Energydesk. See her website or follow her on Twitter @MaeveMCC.

Sign the petition:I support the creation of a plastic bottle deposit return scheme‘.

This article was orginally published on Greenpeace Energydesk.

 

Terminal decline? Fukushima anniversary marks nuclear industry’s deepening crisis

Saturday March 11 marks the sixth anniversary of the triple-disaster in north-east Japan – the earthquake, tsunami and the Fukushima nuclear disaster.

And the news is not good. Scientists are wondering how on earth to stabilise and decontaminate the failed reactors awash with molten nuclear fuel, which are fast turning into graveyards for the radiation-hardened robots sent in to investigate them.

The Japanese government’s estimate of Fukushima compensation and clean-up costs has doubled and doubled again and now stands at ¥21.5 trillion (US$187bn; €177bn).

Indirect costs – such as fuel import costs, and losses to agricultural, fishing and tourism industries – will likely exceed that figure.

Kendra Ulrich from Greenpeace Japan notes in a new report that “for those who were impacted by the worst nuclear disaster in a generation, the crisis is far from over. And it is women and children that have borne the brunt of human rights violations resulting from it, both in the immediate aftermath and as a result of the Japan government’s nuclear resettlement policy.”

Radiation biologist Ian Fairlie summarises the health impacts from the Fukushima disaster: “In sum, the health toll from the Fukushima nuclear disaster is horrendous. At the minimum:

  • Over 160,000 people were evacuated most of them permanently.

  • Many cases of post-trauma stress disorder (PTSD), depression, and anxiety disorders arising from the evacuations.

  • About 12,000 workers exposed to high levels of radiation, some up to 250 mSv

  • An estimated 5,000 fatal cancers from radiation exposures in future.

  • Plus similar (unquantified) numbers of radiogenic strokes, CVS diseases and hereditary diseases.

  • Between 2011 and 2015, about 2,000 deaths from radiation-related evacuations due to ill-health and suicides.

  • An, as yet, unquantified number of thyroid cancers.

  • An increased infant mortality rate in 2012 and a decreased number of live births in December 2011.”

Dr Fairlie’s report was written in August 2015 but it remains accurate. More than half of the 164,000 evacuees from the nuclear disaster remain dislocated. Efforts to restore community life in numerous towns are failing. Local authorities said in January that only 13% of the evacuees in five municipalities in Fukushima Prefecture have returned home after evacuation orders were lifted.

As for Japan’s long-hyped ‘nuclear restart’: just three power reactors are operating in Japan; before the Fukushima disaster, the number topped 50.

A nuclear power ‘crisis’?

Nuclear advocates and lobbyists elsewhere are increasingly talking about the ‘crisis’ facing nuclear power – but they don’t have the myriad impacts of the Fukushima disaster in mind: they’re more concerned about catastrophic cost overruns with reactor projects in Europe and the US.

Michael Shellenberger from the Breakthrough Institute, a US-based pro-nuclear lobby group, has recently written articles about nuclear power’s rapidly accelerating crisis and the crisis that threatens the death of nuclear energy in the West“.

A recent article from the Breakthrough Institute and the like-minded Third Way lobby group discusses the crisis that the nuclear industry is presently facing in developed countries“.

‘Environmental Progress’, another US pro-nuclear lobby group connected to Shellenberger, has a webpage dedicated to the nuclear power crisis. Among other things, it states that 151 gigawatts (GW) of worldwide nuclear power capacity (38% of the total) could be lost by 2030 (compared to 33 GW of retirements over the past decade), and over half of the ageing US reactor fleet is at risk of closure by 2030.

As a worldwide generalisation, nuclear power can’t be said to be in crisis. To take the extreme example, China’s nuclear power program isn’t in crisis – it is moving ahead at pace. Russia’s nuclear power program, to give one more example, is moving ahead at snail’s pace, but isn’t in crisis.

Nonetheless, large parts of the worldwide nuclear industry are in deep trouble. The July 2016 World Nuclear Industry Status Report provides an overview of the troubled status of nuclear power:

  • nuclear power’s share of the worldwide electricity generation is 10.7%, well down from historic peak of 17.6% in 1996;

  • nuclear power generation in 2015 was 8.2% below the historic peak in 2006; and

  • from 2000 to 2015, 646 gigawatts (GW) of wind and solar capacity (combined) were added worldwide while nuclear capacity (not including idle reactors in Japan) fell by 8 GW.

US nuclear industry in crisis

The US nuclear industry is in crisis, with a very old reactor fleet – 44 of its 99 reactors have been operating for 40 years or more – and no likelihood of new reactors for the foreseeable future other than four already under construction.

Last September, Associated Press described one of the industry’s many humiliations: “After spending more than 40 years and $5 billion on an unfinished nuclear power plant in northeastern Alabama, the nation’s largest federal utility is preparing to sell the property at a fraction of its cost.

“The Tennessee Valley Authority has set a minimum bid of $36.4 million for its Bellefonte Nuclear Plant and the 1,600 surrounding acres of waterfront property on the Tennessee River. The buyer gets two unfinished nuclear reactors, transmission lines, office and warehouse buildings, eight miles of roads, a 1,000-space parking lot and more.”

Japanese conglomerate Toshiba and its US-based nuclear subsidiary Westinghouse are in crisis because of massive cost overruns building four AP1000 reactors in the US – the combined cost overruns amount to about US$11.2bn (€10.7bn) and counting.

Toshiba said in February 2017 that it expects to book a US$6.3bn (€5.9bn) writedown on Westinghouse, on top of a US$2.3bn (€2.1bn) writedown in April 2016. The losses exceed the US$5.4bn (€5.1bn) Toshiba paid when it bought a majority stake in Westinghouse in 2006.

Toshiba says it would likely sell Westinghouse if that was an option – but there is no prospect of a buyer. Westinghouse is, as Bloomberg noted, too much of a mess to sell. And since that isn’t an option, Toshiba must sell profitable businesses instead to stave off bankruptcy.

Toshiba is seeking legal advice as to whether Westinghouse should file for Chapter 11 bankruptcy. But even under a Chapter 11 filing, Reuters reported, “Toshiba could still be on the hook for up to $7 billion in contingent liabilities as it has guaranteed Westinghouse’s contractual commitments” for the US AP1000 reactors.

The Toshiba/Westinghouse crisis is creating a ripple effect. A few examples:

  • the NuGen (Toshiba/Engie) consortium has acknowledged that the plan for three AP1000 reactors at Moorside in the UK faces a significant funding gap and both partners reportedly want out of the project;

  • Georgia Power, 45.7% owner of the troubled Vogtle AP1000 project, recently suspended plans for another nuclear plant in Georgia; and

  • Toshiba recently announced its intention to pull out of the plan for two Advanced Boiling Water Reactors at the South Texas Plant, having booked writedowns totaling US$638m (€605m) on the project in previous years.

The French nuclear industry is in crisis

The French nuclear industry is in its worst situation ever, former EDF director Gérard Magnin said in November 2016. The French government is selling assets so it can prop up its heavily indebted nuclear utilities Areva and EDF.

The current taxpayer-funded rescue of the nuclear power industry may cost the French state as much as €10bn (US$10.5bn), Reuters reported in January, and in addition to its “dire financial state, Areva is beset by technical, regulatory and legal problems.”

France has 58 operable reactors and just one under construction. French EPR reactors under construction in France and Finland are three times over budget – the combined cost overruns for the two reactors amount to about €12.7bn (US$13.4bn).

Bloomberg noted in April 2015 that Areva’s EPR export ambitions are in tatters. Now Areva itself is in tatters and is in the process of a government-led restructure and another taxpayer-funded bailout.

On March 1, Areva posted a €665m (US$700m) net loss for 2016. Losses in the preceding five years exceeded €10bn (US$10.5 bn). A large majority of a €5bn (US$5.3bn) recapitalisation of Areva scheduled for June 2017 will come from French taxpayers.

On February 14, EDF released its financial figures for 2016: earnings fell 6.7%, revenue declined 5.1%, net income excluding non-recurring items fell 15%, and EDF’s debt remained steady at €37.4bn (US$39.4bn). All that EDF chief executive Jean-Bernard Levy could offer was the hope that EDF would hit the bottom of the cycle in 2017 and rebound next year.

EDF plans to sell €10bn (US$10.5 bn) of assets by 2020 to rein in its debt, and to sack up to 7,000 staff. The French government provided EDF with €3bn (US$3.2bn) in extra capital in 2016 and will contribute €3bn towards a €4bn (US$4.2bn) capital raising this year.

On March 8, shares in EDF hit an all-time low a day after the €4bn capital raising was launched; the stock price fell to €7.78, less than one-tenth of the €86.45 high a decade ago.

Costs of between €50bn and €100bn (US$53-106bn) will need to be spent by 2030 to meet new safety requirements for reactors in France and to extend their operating lives beyond 40 years.

EDF has set aside €23bn (US$24.3bn) to cover reactor decommissioning and waste management costs in France – less than half of the €54bn (US$57bn) that EDF estimates will be required. A recent report by the French National Assembly’s Commission for Sustainable Development and Regional Development concluded that there is “obvious under-provisioning” and that decommissioning and waste management will likely take longer, be more challenging and cost much more than EDF anticipates.

EDF is being forced to take over parts of its struggling sibling Areva’s operations – a fate you wouldn’t wish on your worst enemy. And just when it seemed that things couldn’t get any worse for EDF, a fire took hold in the turbine room of one of the Flamanville reactors on February 9 and the reactor will likely be offline until late March at an estimated cost of roughly €1.2m (US$1.27m) per day.

Half of the world’s nuclear industry is in crisis and/or shutting down

Combined, the crisis-ridden US, French and Japanese nuclear industries account for 45% of the world’s ‘operable’ nuclear reactors according to the World Nuclear Association’s database, and they accounted for 50% of nuclear power generation in 2015 (and 57% in 2010).

Countries with crisis-ridden nuclear programs or phase-out policies (e.g. Germany, Belgium, and Taiwan) account for about half of the world’s operable reactors and more than half of worldwide nuclear power generation.

The Era of Nuclear Decommissioning (END)

The ageing of the global reactor fleet isn’t yet a crisis for the industry, but it is heading that way.

The assessment by the ‘Environmental Progress’ lobby group that 151 GW of worldwide nuclear power capacity could be shut down by 2030 is consistent with figures from the World Nuclear Association (132 reactor shut-downs by 2035), the International Energy Agency (almost 200 shut-downs between 2014 and 2040) and Nuclear Energy Insider (up to 200 shut-downs in the next two decades). It looks increasingly unlikely that new reactors will match shut-downs.

Perhaps the best characterisation of the global nuclear industry is that a new era is approaching – the Era of Nuclear Decommissioning (END). Nuclear power’s END will entail:

  • a slow decline in the number of operating reactors (unless growth in China can match the decline elsewhere);

  • an increasingly unreliable and accident-prone reactor fleet as ageing sets in;

  • countless battles over lifespan extensions for ageing reactors;

  • an internationalisation of anti-nuclear opposition as neighbouring countries object to the continued operation of ageing reactors (international opposition to Belgium’s reactors is a case in point);

  • a broadening of anti-nuclear opposition as citizens are increasingly supported by local, regional and national governments opposed to reactors in neighbouring countries (again Belgium is a case in point, as is Lithuanian opposition to reactors under construction in Belarus);

  • many battles over the nature and timing of decommissioning operations;

  • many battles over taxpayer bailouts for companies and utilities that haven’t set aside adequate funding for decommissioning;

  • more battles over proposals to impose nuclear waste repositories on unwilling or divided communities; and

  • battles over taxpayer bailouts for companies and utilities that haven’t set aside adequate funding for nuclear waste disposal.

As discussed in a previous article in The Ecologist, nuclear power is likely to enjoy a small, short-lived upswing in the next couple of years as reactors ordered in the few years before the Fukushima disaster come online. Beyond that, the Era of Nuclear Decommissioning sets in, characterised by escalating battles – and escalating sticker-shock – over lifespan extensions, decommissioning and nuclear waste management.

In those circumstances, it will become even more difficult than it currently is for the industry to pursue new reactor projects. A positive feedback loop could take hold and then the industry will be well and truly in crisis.

Nuclear lobbyists debate possible solutions to the nuclear power crisis

Michael Shellenberger from the Breakthrough Institute argues that a lack of standardisation and scaling partly explains the “crisis that threatens the death of nuclear energy in the West”. The constant switching of designs deprives the people who build, operate and regulate nuclear plants of the experience they need to become more efficient.

Shellenberger further argues that there is too much focus on machines, too little on human factors:

“Areva, Toshiba-Westinghouse and others claimed their new designs would be safer and thus, at least eventually, cheaper, but there were always strong reasons to doubt such claims. First, what is proven to make nuclear plants safer is experience, not new designs. …

“In fact, new designs risk depriving managers and workers the experience they need to operate plants more safely, just as it deprives construction companies the experience they need to build plants more rapidly.”

Shellenberger has a three-point rescue plan:

1. ‘Consolidate or Die’: “If nuclear is going to survive in the West, it needs a single, large firm – the equivalent of a Boeing or Airbus – to compete against the Koreans, Chinese and Russians.”

2. ‘Standardize or Die’: He draws attention to the “astonishing” heterogeneity of planned reactors in the UK and says the UK “should scrap all existing plans and start from a blank piece of paper”, that all new plants should be of the same design and “the criteria for choosing the design should emphasize experience in construction and operation, since that is the key factor for lowering costs.”

3. ‘Scale or Die’: Nations “must work together to develop a long-term plan for new nuclear plant construction to achieve economies of scale”, and governments “should invest directly or provide low-cost loans.”

Wrong lessons

Josh Freed and Todd Allen from pro-nuclear lobby group Third Way, and Ted Nordhaus and Jessica Lovering from the Breakthrough Institute, argue that Shellenberger draws the wrong lessons from Toshiba’s recent losses and from nuclear power’s “longer-term struggles” in developed economies.

They argue that “too little innovation, not too much, is the reason that the industry is on life support in the United States and other developed economies”. They state that:

  • The Westinghouse AP1000 represents a fairly straightforward evolution in light-water reactor design, not a radical departure as Shellenberger claims.

  • Standardisation is important but it is not a panacea. Standardisation and building multiple reactors on the same site has limited cost escalation, not brought costs down.

  • Most of the causes of rising cost and construction delays associated with new nuclear builds in the US are attributable to the 30-year hiatus in nuclear construction, not the novelty of the AP1000 design.

  • Reasonable regulatory reform will not dramatically reduce the cost of new light-water reactors, as Shellenberger suggests.

They write this obituary for large light-water reactors: “If there is one central lesson to be learned from the delays and cost overruns that have plagued recent builds in the US and Europe, it is that the era of building large fleets of light-water reactors is over in much of the developed world.

“From a climate and clean energy perspective, it is essential that we keep existing reactors online as long as possible. But slow demand growth in developed world markets makes ten billion dollar, sixty-year investments in future electricity demand a poor bet for utilities, investors, and ratepayers.”

A radical break

The four Third Way / Breakthrough Institute authors conclude that “a radical break from the present light-water regime … will be necessary to revive the nuclear industry”. Exactly what that means, the authors said, would be the subject of a follow-up article.

So readers were left hanging – will nuclear power be saved by failed fast-reactor technology, or failed high-temperature gas-cooled reactors including failed pebble-bed reactors, or by thorium pipe-dreams or fusion pipe-dreams or molten salt reactor pipe-dreams or small modular reactor pipe-dreams? Perhaps we’ve been too quick to write off cold fusion?

The answers came in a follow-up article on February 28. The four authors want a thousand flowers to bloom, a bottom-up R&D-led nuclear recovery as opposed to top-down, state-led innovation.

They don’t just want a new reactor type (or types), they have much greater ambitions for innovation in “nuclear technology, business models, and the underlying structure of the sector” and they note that “a radical break from the light water regime that would enable this sort of innovation is not a small undertaking and will require a major reorganization of the nuclear sector.”

To the extent that the four authors want to tear down the existing nuclear industry and replace it with a new one, they share some common ground with nuclear critics who want to tear down the existing nuclear industry and not replace it with a new one.

Shellenberger also shares some common ground with nuclear critics: he thinks the UK should scrap all existing plans for new reactors and start from a blank piece of paper. But nuclear critics think the UK should scrap all existing plans for new reactors and not start from a blank piece of paper.

Small is beautiful?

The four Third Way / Breakthrough Institute authors argue that nuclear power must become substantially cheaper – thus ruling out large conventional reactors “operated at high atmospheric pressures, requiring enormous containment structures, multiply redundant back-up cooling systems, and water cooling towers and ponds, which account for much of the cost associated with building light-water reactors.”

Substantial cost reductions will not be possible “so long as nuclear reactors must be constructed on site one gigawatt at a time. … At 10 MW or 100 MW, by contrast, there is ample opportunity for learning by doing and economies of multiples for several reactor classes and designs, even in the absence of rapid demand growth or geopolitical imperatives.”

Other than their promotion of small reactors and their rejection of large ones, the four authors are non-specific about their preferred reactor types. Any number of small-reactor concepts have been proposed.

Small modular reactors (SMRs) have been the subject of much discussion and even more hype. The bottom line is that there isn’t the slightest chance that they will fulfil the ambition of making nuclear power “substantially cheaper” unless and until a manufacturing supply chain is established at vast expense.

And even then, it’s doubtful whether the power would be cheaper and highly unlikely that it would be substantially cheaper. After all, economics has driven the long-term drift towards larger reactors.

As things stand, no country, company or utility has any intention of betting billions on building an SMR supply chain. The prevailing scepticism is evident in a February 2017 Lloyd’s Register report based on “insights and opinions of leaders across the sector” and the views of almost 600 professionals and experts from utilities, distributors, operators and equipment manufacturers.

The Lloyd’s Register report states that the potential contribution of SMRs “is unclear at this stage, although its impact will most likely apply to smaller grids and isolated markets.” Respondents predicted that SMRs have a “low likelihood of eventual take-up, and will have a minimal impact when they do arrive”.

The Third Way / Breakthrough Institute authors are promoting small reactors because of the spectacular failure of a number of large reactor projects, but that’s hardly a recipe for success. An analysis of SMRs in the Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists sums up the problems:

“Without a clear-cut case for their advantages, it seems that small nuclear modular reactors are a solution looking for a problem. Of course in the world of digital innovation, this kind of upside-down relationship between solution and problem is pretty normal. Smart phones, Twitter, and high-definition television all began as solutions looking for problems.

“In the realm of nuclear technology, however, the enormous expense required to launch a new model as well as the built-in dangers of nuclear fission require a more straightforward relationship between problem and solution. Small modular nuclear reactors may be attractive, but they will not, in themselves, offer satisfactory solutions to the most pressing problems of nuclear energy: high cost, safety, and weapons proliferation.”

Small or large reactors, consolidation or innovation, Generation 2/3/4 reactors … it’s not clear that the nuclear industry will be able to recover – however it responds to its current crisis.

 


 

Dr Jim Green is the national nuclear campaigner with Friends of the Earth Australia and editor of the ‘Nuclear Monitor’ newsletter, where a version of this article was originally published.

Nuclear Monitor, published 20 times a year, has been publishing deeply researched, often critical articles on all aspects of the nuclear cycle since 1978. A must-read for all those who work on this issue!

 

Noise, the ‘ignored pollutant’: health, nature and ecopsychology

A few days ago I went for a walk, well before the dawn, in order to listen to the ‘dawn chorus’. It’s something I like to do a few times a year, especially in the early Spring when the birdsong is at its loudest.

I’ve been doing these walks since before my teens. Over that period there’s been one inescapable change in the countryside around my home town of Banbury – noise.

In many ways the modern urban-dweller has become immured to noise; we exclude it, and bar it from our thoughts – a process even more challenging since the advent of the personal stereo and the mobile phone. But we never truly escape it.

For those who like to enjoy the natural environment, noise is something to be escaped from within the relative sanctuary of the landscape. These days that’s getting harder and harder to accomplish.

That’s not only because of noise from all around – in particular from urban areas, roads and the increasing mechanisation of agriculture – but also due to the increasing level of air traffic overhead.

Bird song is good for you

Walking out before the dawn my objective was to reach Salt Way, which fringes the south-western quadrant of Banbury. It’s the old Roman salt route from Droitwich to Buckinghamshire, which has existed since long before the town itself, and which links to the more ancient prehistoric Portway and Welsh Road trackways.

Due to its age Salt Way has exceptionally dense, wide and species-rich ancient hedgerows which demarcate it from the surrounding fields.

Perfect for listening to birds. Except on that morning, as even before rush hour the easterly breeze was wafting the sound of the M40 motorway from over two and a half miles away, on the other side of town.

That got me musing on an interesting paper by Cox et al., ‘Doses of Neighborhood Nature‘, which I’d just read in the journal Bioscience.

In the study the researchers were able to demonstrate a positive correlation between the quality of people’s everyday experience of nature, and a lower prevalence of depression, anxiety, and stress. These results build upon a wealth of other similar studies which have appeared over the last few years – part of the growing fields of ecopsychology.

One of the principal metrics the study used to assess the ‘quality’ of a persons natural experience was the afternoon abundance of birds. While that doesn’t strictly correlate to where I am now, stood in the gloom of a pre-dawn byway, I think the comparison was valid – given the louder and intense levels of birdsong I was able experience.

Noise and nuisance

If ‘natural’ experiences are good for you, does the inverse effect hold true? – that urban noise is bad for you?

The damage of noise to society has been acknowledge in English law since Henry III introduced the concept of ‘public nuisance’, almost 800 years ago. Urban environments can also create negative health effects, especially in terms of stress and mental health.

Generally what many research studies find is that our recovery from the stresses of everyday life tends to be better, and takes place faster, when we are exposed to green landscaped spaces or less noisy natural environments. Difficulty is, that’s getting harder to do these days – the result of higher urbanization globally.

Banbury is a growing town. Immediately to the west of the section of Salt Way where I was sat, the construction of a few hundred houses was about to commence. Permission for another thousand was recently granted on the opposite side of the main A361 road. To the north another five hundred are being planned or built, and another 2,500 are being added to the southern edge of the town right now.

That doesn’t just mean that the species rich hedgerow along Salt Way will be severed from the countryside by urban development – perhaps reducing its diversity in future.

As each year passes, it takes longer to get to the outside of the town; and progressively harder to escape the ‘noise’ envelope of the town as its larger size generates higher volumes of traffic and thus noise.

But aren’t cars are getting quieter?

Road vehicles are not the only significant source of noise. Eg, for those of you who drink instant coffee, the occasional hiss of high pressure steam that radiates out across Banbury is created by your caffeine craving – as the leading brands are made here in Europe’s biggest coffee plant.

The common misapprehension about road noise is that it’s about motorized vehicles. In fact, unless the vehicle has a mechanical fault, a large part of the noise comes from the tyre’s contact with the road surface. Hence the use of many more electric vehicles would still give rise to significant road noise.

As a briefing from the Parliamentary Office of Science and Technology noted in 2009, while the noise emitted by cars has reduce by eleven decibels since 1970, there has been no associated reduction in the road noise generated. That’s because tyre noise is difficult to tackle, and also because traffic volumes have significantly increased, meaning there are more tyres making noise.

Here in Banbury we also have another problem – aircraft. It’s a lot less ‘acute’ than it was, since the USAF’s jet fighters left their local base in 1994. However the trans-Atlantic air corridors for south-east England and middle-Europe cross the skies above North Oxfordshire. At certain times of the day, particularly morning and evening, the ‘chronic’ level noise from above is almost constant.

The invasive nature of that noise was highlighted in 2010 when the Eyjafjallajökull volcano erupted. I went for a walk and there was something glaringly different about the landscape. Then I realized: no aircraft noise – the result of the flight ban.

The effect was stunning, stirring, and unfortunately short-lived.

What we’re talking about here is lost ‘tranquility’

In 2010 the new coalition government conducted a ‘bonfire of the Quangos‘ – closing or merging many of the government’s advisory and expert bodies. For me one of the most significant was the abolition of the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution (RCEP).

Since 1970, RCEP had produced some of the UK government’s best, and most politically embarrassing academic studies on pollution and the environment – from nuclear waste to soil protection.

In 1994, RECP produced its ground-breaking 18th Report on Transport and the Environment. Against the background of the Government’s road building programme of that time, the contents were inflammatory – and increased the level of protests against new road construction.

In that report there were two maps which showed the level of ‘tranquility’ – the area of countryside unaffected by road, aircraft or urban noise – in the south-east of England. One map showed the ‘tranquil’ area in 1960, the other in 1992. Subtracting one map from the other you realize the level of ‘tranquil’ countryside which was lost over that 30-year period.

In their conclusions RCEP stated,

“Noise from vehicles and aircraft is a major source of stress and dissatisfaction, notably in towns but now intruding into many formerly tranquil areas. Construction of new roads and airports to accommodate traffic is destroying irreplaceable landscapes and features of our cultural heritage.”

The importance of ecopsychology to environmentalism

It would be easy to reduce this to an issue of car tyres, or the encroachment of urbanization. Instead what environmentalism has to grasp are the clear messages about human well-being which are emerging from ecopsychological research.

Climate change is abstract. Air pollution, except under extreme conditions, is abstract. Yet studies which examine the fundamental psychological human dependence upon the natural environment can tell us something which, for many, is directly appreciable.

Talking about wellbeing, or the the stress- and anxiety-reducing qualities of green space, might seem a distraction from the perilous ecological challenges of our time. That is a far too limited perspective:

  • If we deal with road noise, by reducing the use of road vehicles, or reducing their speeds, we affect both air pollution and climate change.

  • If we increase green spaces, and take greater care with how the urban fringe is managed, then we improve people’s ability to access nature and increase their well-being – and we also begin to address issues such as biodiversity loss and landscape fragmentation.

  • More than anything, increasing people’s awareness of the natural environment would increase society’s valuation of it – and their propensity to change to protect it.

A few years ago I write a briefing on ecopsychology as part of a series on how lightweight camping/backpacking could be a means to address lifestyle sustainability – and allow people to adapt/develop the skills to live lower-impact lifestyles in their own homes as a result.

A focus on ecopsychology as part of local environment campaigns, especially for children, could be equally transformative – particularly as current economic and political trends are questioning the value of ‘big’ ecological issues such as climate change.

Small is, after all, beautiful?

That morning, walking to the top of Banbury’s local summit, Crouch Hill, the sun rose through a cloudy horizon. All around the noise level had been growing steadily as the rush hour approached and the roads filled with vehicles.

Moving beyond that requires more than a change of transport policy. What it requires is a realization that human interaction with nature is an absolute essential for well-being.

Far more than just changing your diet or going to the gym, contact with nature is a mechanism to find ourselves as ‘whole’ people; part of our environment, not shielded or walled away from it.

Walking out into a dark morning to sit in a hedge and listen to birds may seem a strange route to health, but the evidence is that it works.

 


 

Paul Mobbs is an independent environmental researcher and freelance author. He is also the creator of the Free Range Activism Website, FRAW

A fully referenced version of this article is available on FRAW.