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Boring Trend:’We’ Are Planting Forests for Carbon Sequestration
Isnt it Boring?Imagine a forest landscape where every tree is aligned and equally spaced apart.Isnt A forest where there are no sounds, no undergrowth and a distinct lack of species. Could this be the fate of our environment as carbon forestry becomes a common way to offset greenhouse gas emissions? Or, could it supplement reforestation programs and slowly ease the biodiversity crisis?
According to a 2011 report by the monitoring and analysis agency Ecosystem Marketplace over 30 million metric tonnes of carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2e) was contracted across forest markets in 2010. The emergence of carbon forestry is particularly evident in Australia, where an estimated sixty five thousand hectares of forests have been planted for the purpose of carbon sequestration. Similarly, more than one thousand hectares of ‘for purpose’ woodland have been created in the United Kingdom through the Forestry Commission, one of the country’s largest land managers.
read here
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- Tree-planting initiatives may be needed – Carter (radionz.co.nz)
Posted in BIODIVERSITY, climate change, Global Warming
Tagged CLIMATE, Environment, nature
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Tokyo Upset Over Survey of India for not Recognising ‘Sea of Japan’
An upset Tokyo has lodged a protest with New Delhi against the Survey of India not indicating ‘Sea of Japan’ on its maps by that name. India’s official map-making agency, the Survey of India has omitted naming the water body in its English version, though the Hindi one calls the area ‘Japan Sagar’ on its maps.
A marginal sea of the western Pacific Ocean, lying between the Asian mainland, the Japanese archipelago and Sakhalin, it is bordered by Japan, North Korea, Russia and South Korea. The reason for Japan taking offence is that the name ‘Sea of Japan’ is a bone of contention between it and the Koreas. While Seoul prefers the name ‘East Sea’ to be used instead of or in addition to ‘Sea of Japan’, North Korea wants it called ‘East Sea of Korea’.
It was last month that Japan noticed this “discrepancy” in the Survey of India’s English map and brought it to the notice of the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA). They also plan to take up the matter with the Surveyor General of India. The issue is learnt to have figured during the foreign office consultations between the two countries recently.
Japan has also given documents to the MEA saying the UN recognised ‘Sea of Japan’ as the standard geographical term in March 2004. “The simultaneous use of both — ‘Sea of Japan’ and ‘East Sea’ — infringes on the neutrality of the UN,” Japan has argued.
Tokyo has pointed out that the governments of countries such as the US, UK, France, Germany and China officially use the name ‘Sea of Japan’.
Source:
Posted in India, map making, News, oceans
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UNREDACTED: The National Security Archive Blog
By Eamon Eriksen
The next time you request documents for declassification, it is likely your submission will be processed by a private contractor, not a government employee.
The privatization of the FOIA process has proliferated in recent years. According to a recent Bloomberg article, “At least 25 agencies are outsourcing parts of the FOIA process, a 40 percent jump since Obama’s inauguration.” Since 2009, the government has awarded at least 250 FOIA related contracts, and in most cases contractors now outnumber government employees three to one.
Proponents of outsourcing argue that private contractors can speed the FOIA process, reduce backlogs and save taxpayer money. Speeding up FOIA responses should certainly be a priority, but not at the expense of a quality review process and the proper functioning of government accountability.
Levels of involvement vary from agency to agency, but these contractors are now routinely involved in nearly every stage of…
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