quarta-feira, 30 de outubro de 2013

Adventuring with information - Climate Change’s Impact on Timor’s Coral Reefs

Really nice work developed by Emelyn Rude... will try to find out some more information about this study!


By: Emelyn Rude

In 2007, despite mounting civil unrest, Timor-Leste established its first National Park connecting a number of endangered bird areas and encompassing a large section of the Coral Triangle, an underwater zone believed to hold the greatest diversity of marine life on Earth. Emelyn Rude is a Young Explorer studying the balance between environmental conservation and economic development in a nation of newly restored independence.

One of the incredible resources available to the people of Com, and the majority of those living on Timor’s coasts for that matter, are the country’s spectacular coral reefs. Timor-Leste is situated right at the very south of the famed Coral Triangle, an underwater area with the highest marine biodiversity of anywhere on the planet.

Home to some 75 percent of all known species of coral and 3,000+ species of reef fish, this marine area encompasses the oceans around the Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, as well as Timor-Leste.

The importance of these reefs are not only environmental – they are incredibly lucrative to local communities as well. The fisheries and aquaculture in the region have an estimated value of $11.7 billion and reef and beach based tourism provides a revenue of approximately $12 billion annually.

But conservation, tourism, and fishing do not always work hand in hand, so that’s where efforts by groups such as the Coral Triangle Initiative come in.

Referenced from their website, ”The Coral Triangle Initiative on Coral Reefs, Fisheries, and Food Security (CTI-CFF) is a multilateral partnership of six countries working together to sustain extraordinary marine and coastal resources by addressing crucial issues such as food security, climate change and marine biodiversity.” It’s American-based glue, and major funding source is USAID, with technical support from the NOAA (the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Association).

I managed to catch up with Rusty Brainard over the phone a few weeks ago while he was waiting to board a flight to Scotland. Mr. Brainard is the Division Chief of the Coral Reef Ecosystem Division at the NOAA Pacific Islands Fisheries Center and has done extensive work in Timor as well as in the broader Coral Triangle as a whole. Below are some highlights of a much longer interview that can be read here.

Climate Change and its impact on coral reefs are a growing global issue. Can you go into more detail on the Coral Triangle Initiative’s efforts surrounding climate change in Timor?

Rusty Brainard: We have established 10 baseline sites around the country, three on the south shore, one on the east, and the rest on the north shore. At each site we measure acidity, carbon chemistry, overall salinity, pH, saturation rate, and temperature. All of these are used to establish a baseline of carbon readings.

Calcium carbonate levels are significant to measure the calcification rate of corals and algae. In order for coral to grow, it needs a certain substrate of calcium carbonate, which helps the polyps attached to rocky surfaces and forms the basis of their skeletal growth.

When you change the sea water chemistry, both corals and algea suffer badly. By mid-century, depending on which CO2 emission prediction is correct, many of these reef building species will no longer be able to produce the calcium carbonate that is essential to the reef structure. Only 1,000 species of coral can do this, but millions of species depend on this habitat to survive. We will lose the reef’s diversity.

Have you already seen climate change’s impact on Timor’s reefs?

RB: We’ve established a baseline of calcification, but we don’t have data for what the rates were previously. We’ve taken coral bores to track it in decades past but we’re having difficulty taking these bores back to the United States. Timor-Leste is not signed on to CITES (Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild Fauna and Flora) so the NOAA can’t bring the bores out of the country.

When Timor first gained independence they signed on to a whole host of treaties without thinking of the long-term consequences, which caused lots of problems for them. The government is not against CITES, but is more wary of signing onto new treaties now. Hopefully they will ratify it soon.

The Great Barrier Reef has seen dramatic increases in calcification rates over the past few decades however.

Bores? How does that work? Is it like tree rings?

RB: Yes, actually. Corals with an abundance of food tend to grow really fast and also tend to be more resilient to increased carbon emissions in the water. You can see this growth on the coral’s internal structures.

Bores aside, all this doesn’t sound very positive. Is there any hope for the Coral Triangle?

RB: A lot of our observations about calcification come from the lab environment, but coral in the wild might be much more resilient than we think. Chemical changes in an experiment happen over the course of a few days while these changes happen over decades in the oceans. But chemical changes do also seem to have a devastating impact on coral reproduction, but we know very little at this point about coral’s life history.

How are CTI’s efforts in Timor different from their efforts elsewhere in the Coral Traingle?

RB: Working in Timor is much easier because the country is much smaller, especially compared to Indonesia. They are also developing an economic system from scratch. Getting people to change is really hard, but the government here didn’t even exist a decade ago. We are able to start from an eco-system based approach right off the bat, which is much less of a challenge than trying to get people to change.

But it’s also difficult. They have very little structures in place, particularly information structures. Politically, population wise, resource wise, it’s also a very different situation. It’s more similar to pacific islands like American Samoa in that sense.

A big thanks to Rusty Brainard for risking missing his flight to take the time out to talk to me.

SOURCE: RudeAdventures

terça-feira, 29 de outubro de 2013

Fish's frame

          These pictures were taken at a MAF's office. It is about a few sea fishes species found in Timor-Leste water's....but you do not have to be a PhD to know that there is many more species to be identified, studied, catalogued,...
          Timor-Leste needs to support researches about its coastal waters. This area has a extreme value for the society and environment. This would help the sustainable development of Timor!

quarta-feira, 18 de setembro de 2013

Xanana Gusmão's speech at the “Harnessing Natural ResourceWealth for Inclusive Growth and Economic Development” Conference

KEYNOTE ADDRESS
BY HIS EXCELLENCY THE PRIME MINISTER KAY RALA XANANA GUSMÃO

AT THE CONFERENCE ON  “HARNESSING NATURAL RESOURCE  WEALTH FOR INCLUSIVE GROWTH AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT”

Dili, Timor-Leste

18 September 2013

His Excellency Taur Matan Ruak, President of the Republic

His Excellency Anoop Singh, Director of the International Monetary Fund’s Asia and
Pacific Department

His Excellency, Mr Hiroto Arakawa, Chief Economist of the Asian Development Bank

Members of Parliament

Members of Government

Ambassadors

Distinguished guests

Ladies and gentlemen,

It is a great pleasure to speak at this conference on “Harnessing Natural ResourceWealth for Inclusive Growth and Economic Development”.

I would like to thank the International Monetary Fund, the Asian Development Bank, theWorld Bank Group and the Japan International Cooperation Agency for their importantsupport to this Conference.

We also welcome our international guests who will be able to share with us lessonslearned from resource rich nations around our region and the world.

I am very pleased to speak today because the theme of this conference reflects ourvision for our nation. It is a vision that is set out in our Strategic Development Plan 2011-2030 and it is a vision we are already pursuing with determination.

It is absolutely our intention - and our unrelenting focus - to wisely use our natural resource wealth to develop a diversified economy and build our beloved nation for all our people.

Ladies and gentlemen,

In Timor-Leste we are well aware of the rise in inequality across the world. This is both in developed and developing countries, including the great emerging economies.

In our region of the Asia Pacific we have seen spectacular growth stories. With access to capital and a focus on human resources many Asian nations have made remarkable progress which has lifted millions of people out of poverty.

Economic growth can only be sustainable; however, if we ensure that there is improvement in the social well being of the people. However, some of the economic growth in our region has often not being balanced and inequality continues to rise.

The Asia Pacific is still home to nearly two thirds of the world’s poor and far too many people face hunger and extreme deprivation. Without addressing poverty and inequality the social cohesion and stability of many growing economies will be put at great risk.

There are many reasons for the growth in inequality but a common thread is the self-interested actions of the wealthy and the powerful.

The world’s financial system is a key part of the problem as it perpetuates and reinforces inequality. I think we can say with confidence that global free market finance has failed.

The Global Financial Crisis stripped bare the world of finance and exposed gross inefficiency, unrestrained greed and systemic corruption. To make matters worse, no one in the developed world took responsibility for the Crisis and it was the world’s poor and vulnerable that suffered most. And yet, even during the Crisis, Timor-Leste was subject to moralising lectures, for spending our money to improve the desperate lives of our people, by the very same experts who were bringing the world’s economy to its knees.

The unrestrained greed and market manipulation by world finance resulted in a huge rise in inequality, as well as in hypocrisy. It also brought poverty and struggle to the people of once proud European nations. We saw hundreds of billions of dollars in bailout funds being given to developed nations while the world’s fragile and Least Developed Countries were largely ignored. And we must ask the question, why?

It is perverse that we are urged to put our faith in this same system that has caused such pain and which continues to perpetuate inequality. There must be a better way.

Ladies and gentlemen,

In Timor-Leste we want to follow a different path. We want to make sure the benefit of our natural resources and our development is spread across our whole nation and to all our people. That is why Timor-Leste is pursuing balanced and sustained growth.

Timor-Leste is a small but emerging economy with open markets and some of the lowest tax rates in the world. We have set an economic and regulatory framework to promote growth and development.

Since 2007, we have enjoyed average rates of economic growth of 11.9% and this strong growth is predicted to continue into the future. This is creating jobs and opportunities for our people and tax revenue to fund important government services including health and education.

We understand that we remain a fragile nation and our economic progress has been possible because of our sustained stability and security. For this important reason, we have also been investing in the professionalism and capability of our security sector to maintain and build peace.

Our sovereign wealth fund, the Petroleum Fund, has grown from $1.8 billion in 2007 to almost $14 billion dollars today. Since January this year, the fund has increased on average by more than $300 million each month, thanks to crisis in Egypt and Syria.

We all recognise the enormous responsibility that we have in ensuring that the wealth from our natural resources is spent to improve the lives and opportunities of our people and build a foundation for our future; while at the same time preserving wealth for future generations.

We are proud that Timor-Leste was the first country in Asia, and the third country in the world, to comply with the Extractive Industry Transparency Initiative. This means that every dollar earned from our oil and gas resources is accounted for and audited so that the funds are managed transparently for the benefit of our people.

Ladies and gentlemen,

Our people sacrificed so much for the cause of independence and self-determination.

They have suffered unspeakable acts of violence and hardship. And while we prevailed against all odds, and with little international support, too many still suffer every day from extreme poverty and miserable living conditions. They deserve more.

When we became an independent nation we started with nothing. We had no money, no experience of nation building and we lacked the core infrastructure necessary to support a modern and productive economy.

And so, when the wealth from our petroleum reserves started to flow we had only one option – to spend money to meet the immediate needs of our people and begin the development of our country.

First, we recognised that without electricity we could not build our country, grow our economy or provide government services. So we embarked on our country’s biggest ever infrastructure project and built a national electricity generation and distribution system. This means that power is now provided across the nation.

We know that we have a long way to go. While building good national infrastructure is essential to being able to develop socially and support balanced growth, the challenge is large and ongoing.

We need to build an extensive network of quality and well maintained roads to connect our communities, promote rural development and support industry and tourism.

Providing access to safe drinking water and sanitation is critical to the wellbeing of our people and our national development. And it is important that we have sea port capacity to support our development and a national airport that can meet growing demands.

Importantly, we are also working to establish an undersea optic cable connection from Darwin to Timor-Leste to provide access to high speed broadband internet. This is to make sure that our nation does not suffer from being on the wrong side of the global technological divide and will give our people equal access to knowledge and global connections.

Without providing our nation with core infrastructure we cannot achieve balanced and equitable growth.

Ladies and gentlemen,

Our vision, which is set out in our Strategic Development Plan 2011-2030 is to transform our country from a low income nation to a country with upper-middle income levels by 2030, with a population that is secure, educated and healthy.

The first section of our Strategic Development Plan is Social Capital. We started our plan with this focus on health, education and training, social inclusion and because we know that the true strength of our nation is our people. We recognise that we cannot build a nation without the human resources to do so.

It is often said that you can judge a society by how well it treats its weakest members. In Timor-Leste we are proud to able to support the most vulnerable member of our community. We have established an effective system of pension and transfer payments to the elderly, the disabled and to our veterans and introduced similar social justice measures for other vulnerable groups such as women, children and young people. We see this as an appropriate way for using our natural resource wealth to tackle inequality and disadvantage.

It is very important that this conference does not neglect an issue of vital importance to equitable growth and that is the circumstances of women and girls.

Growth can never be inclusive if most economic power resides in men. Social progress is no progress at all if it is only men that are benefiting or if women and girls are subject to violence and abuse.

We must always remember that the women of our nation sacrificed and suffered as much as the men in our struggle for independence. Regrettably, this included sexual violence which has been a brutal weapon of war in conflicts across the world. In measuring inclusive growth and development, I therefore suggest we consider gender equality, and violence against women and girls, as critical indicators of progress and development.

Ladies and gentlemen,


Government expenditure must also be balanced across the whole nation to ensure that we do not create an enclave economy in Dili.

The government is embarking on a program of decentralisation to ensure the delivery of services is brought closer to all our people and to give the responsibility for decision making about local issues to local communities.

We are also undertaking a major initiative to ensure that our economic growth is balanced across our nation. The Programa Nasional Dezenvolvimentu Suku, or National Program for Village Development, is a new, nation-wide community development program which will see more than $300 million over 8 years funding basic village infrastructure.

In our rural areas, poor infrastructure is a key constraint to development and access to services and opportunities which helps perpetuate a cycle of poverty and inequality. By supporting communities to plan and build basic infrastructure, this program aims to help to make sure that people are not excluded from development opportunities. It follows the earlier Referendum Package and District Development Programs and is a key policy to ensure balanced and fair economic growth.

We are also moving to establish a Special Economic and Social Zone in Oecussi. Dr. Mari Alkatiri is leading the establishment of this development zone and the concept may be extended to other parts of the country. The Special Zone in Oecussi is a new approach to promote sustainable and balanced development and fight poverty.

Through this Zone Oecussi will become a commercial and industrial centre focusing on market opportunities in the region.

Timor-Leste is also implementing the Tasi Mane Project to develop an on-shore oil and gas industry to create jobs and underpin economic growth. The Tasi Mane Project will open up our south coast as a sub-regional centre for the petroleum industry, bringing a direct economic dividend from this industry.

Ladies and gentlemen,

Before I finish, I would just like to mention that Timor-Leste knows it is not alone in the fight against poverty and systematic oppression. We have reached out to the international community in solidarity and joined with other nations facing similar challenges to ourselves.

In particular, Timor-Leste wants to address the problems with development assistance and international engagement in fragile and developing countries. We have seen so much money being spent for so few outcomes in the name of international aid. An important part of this approach is working with the g7+, which is an innovative new collaboration between 18 fragile States to provide a united voice for fragile countries and to advocate for change in global development policies. Many of the g7+ members are rich in natural resources and we want to work together to ensure that we are not exploited and to ensure that the benefits of this wealth is distributed fairly to our people.

As a group we want to ensure that natural resource wealth does not fuel conflict as we know from bitter experience that without peace and stability there can be no development.

This message was repeated loudly and clearly, when the ‘g7+’ nations, and some of our neighbours from Asia and the Pacific Islands met in Dili in February of this year, at an international conference, hosted by my Government with the theme “Development for All”. The Conference agreed on the “Dili Consensus”, which set out our priorities, and hopes, for the post-2015 development agenda.

The Dili Consensus recognised that the standard approaches to development have failed and acknowledged that the challenges we face vary depending upon local context.

The nations of the world will meet at a special session of the United Nations on September 25 to follow up efforts made towards achieving the Millennium Development Goals and to discuss the post 2015 development agenda. Timor-Leste is proud of our Finance Minister, Emilia Pires, who was a member of the High Level Panel that advised the United Nations Secretary General on this agenda.

In April this year, Timor-Leste was also honoured to take over the Chair of the 69th session of the United Nations Economic and Social Commission for the Asia Pacific. I have the privilege to Chair this session and working with ESCAP, and the nations of the Asia Pacific, to make further progress and improve human development.

We debated the challenges faced by the nations of the Asia-Pacific region with the aim of better integrating plans and actions at the regional and sub-regional levels to address human development and provide better connectivity to break the isolation of some countries.

We are of course honoured to work with Dr. Noeleen Heyzer, United Nations Under Secretary-General and Executive Secretary of ESCAP. Regrettably it was not possible to have Dr. Heyzer here with us today in her capacity as Special Adviser of the United Nations Secretary-General for Timor-Leste. We wish her a quick recovery and we look forward to working with her in friendship and cooperation.

Ladies and gentlemen,

I wish you all the most productive and constructive conference on Harnessing Natural Resource Wealth for Inclusive Growth and Economic Development.

I trust that the outcomes of this conference will help us to improve our fiscal policy, and the design of our national public investment framework, to transform our nation through a stronger and diversified economy. Using our natural resources wisely will allow us to make sustainable structural changes to our country.

Economic growth by itself is for nothing if it does not support poverty reduction, job creation, better education and health services and the tackling of social exclusion.

Our people fought for independence, not for a few but for every single Timorese person.

Let us all work together again to build a better and fairer nation for our people.

Thank you very much.

18 September 2013
Kay Rala Xanana Gusmão

sexta-feira, 13 de setembro de 2013

Renewable Energy

      Energy is always going to be a critical discussion. The human evolutionary process (from the society point of view) has been driven to the complete dependence of energy. We need it to warm us up, to move us around but what we really need is electrical energy. Our comforts are provided by energy.

    Nowadays, the globe's most used energy are non-renewable, which means we are using finite source such oil, gas, minerals. From the pasts decades, renewable energy such wind, solar, tide, have been studied, but its practice is still very far. Although we have several examples of renewable energy being applied throughout the world, the high prices are the main crippling, besides the big energetic lobby among mega corporations and the cultural change that humans must go through to accept clean energy as a basic need.
   
    Today follows a report about renewable energy in Timor, how the country has been positioned about it and what are the goals. To read it, just click at the below link.


segunda-feira, 9 de setembro de 2013

More Weather

     Following the latest post, here we forward a didatic and easy-interpretation website to check the forecast all over Timor-Leste. Simple to surf, simple understand, helpful.



segunda-feira, 2 de setembro de 2013

Timor Climate Data


Here you can find weather data from various sources for Timor Leste. The reliability of the data is left to your own discretion. We hope that we can add to this content and update the files as we collate more data.
Daily weather data – get the daily weather data from our 20 automatic weather stations. Includes a map with GPS locations of each site. Data for rain, temperature, humidity, radiation and wind speed. (Starts from Oct, 2012)
Atauro Weather – Click here to access data about what the weather at Atauro is doing right now!
Oecussi Weather - Click here to access data about what the weather at Oecussi is doing right now!
Notes on the satellite weather stations
  1. Data is recorded every 60 minutes. So rainfall of 20mm means 20mm over 60 minutes.
  2. Data updates every 3 hours.
  3. Wind speed is measured in meters per second. 1 ms-1 = 1.94 knots. Basically, double the wind speed to get knots.
  4. Wind direction is measured as degrees from north. 90deg = east, 180deg = south, 270deg = west
  5. From time to time a sensor stops functioning eg wind direction constantly at 353deg shows its stopped functioning.
Seeds of Life Rainfall - Daily rainfall data for over 20 different sites where SoL measures rain for research purposes.
The Santiga File – A massive research task resulted in the collation of monthly rainfall data from 64 sites around Timor Leste.  Records date as far back as 1914 and go through to Indonesian times.
ALGIS,  Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries – Monthly data for the 12 automatic weather stations managed by the agro-meteorology division in MAF.

Historical Weather Data from Timor Agri:
Rainfall and Humidity Evaporation and Sunshine Cloud Cover
Temperature Weather Phenomena Wind

Monthly Stream Flow Data for 28 locations around Timor Leste from 1952-1974
http://www.bmkg.go.id/imagesData/satelit.jpg - Courtesy of BMKG, Jakarta, Indonesia
http://www.usno.navy.mil/NOOC/nmfc-ph/RSS/jtwc/ab/abpwsair.jpg - Courtesy of US Naval Observatory
http://tropic.ssec.wisc.edu/real-time/mimic-tpw/ausf/anim/latest72hrs.gif - Courtesy of SSEC, University of Wisconsin, USA

SOURCE: Seeds Of Life

sexta-feira, 9 de agosto de 2013

Timor-Leste Fish Survey Will Help Create Sustainable Fisheries


By:Rui Pinto

    CI recently supported a joint National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)/Coral Triangle Support Partnership fish biomass survey along the northern coast of <http://www.conservation.org/where/asia-pacific/timor-leste/pages/timor-leste.aspx>Timor-Leste. Working with the government and communities, the team aims to develop understanding of the local ecology. The results will provide valuable information about the numbers and size of nearshore fish stocks, vital to improve sustainable fisheries management in the region.

    Local fishermen launch their boat in Nino Konis Santana National Park in eastern Timor-Leste. (© World Wildlife Fund, Inc. / Matthew Abbott)

    Fishing plays an important role on Atauru, a small island off the coast of Dili which is home to 8,000 people. Thanks to CI’s<http://blog.conservation.org/2013/02/biodiversity-survey-supports-new-no-take-zones-in-timor-leste/> marine Rapid Assessment Program (RAP) survey in 2012, we know that Atauro has one of the highest levels of marine biodiversity throughout Timor-Leste, including several species thought to be new to science.

    Managing an area with such high endemic diversity has plenty of challenges. There is a range of languages spoken on the island, which can make managing fisheries difficult. There are also many fishing sites and only three fisheries officers, responsible for covering 10,000 hectares (24,700 acres) of marine area.

    The research currently being done will help inform the community about the quantity of fish that exist within Atauru fishing boundaries. To do this, NOAA is collecting information about habitats, which species are found there and their sizes. We are also collecting water samples to better understand ocean changes and acidification.

    Needless to say, all the people we have met during our work here truly appreciate our support toward improved understanding and management of fisheries, as this natural resource is essential to local livelihoods. Fishing is the main source of income on the island.

    On our first day we met José Guerreiro, one of the three fisheries officers on Atauru. Together we discussed our plans and explained the scientific process and techniques involved in the fish survey. We brought along posters showing small invertebrates and their importance to the health of the reef. These visuals made it easier to explain the<http://www.pifsc.noaa.gov/cred/arms.php> Autonomous Reef Monitoring Structures (ARMS) that were installed on the reef last year by NOAA.

    In 2015, these ARMS will be brought onto land, and the data they’ve collected will help inform scientists and the local community about the health of the reef and help make sense of how our ocean is changing.

    José was enthusiastic about our work and impressed with the resources we supplied to improve understanding among civil servants of the importance of sustainable resource management. We agreed that this survey is essential to learn what species are present here, so we can map out how to best manage these natural resources to ensure they endure for many years to come.

    “We are now spending more and more time fishing, and catching less and less,” José said. “We need to explore other ways of making a living ­ perhaps tourism. But we [fishermen] need to be able to cater for the tourist’s needs; this is something we cannot do right now.”

    Atauru’s coral reef system is under threat from both unregulated fishing and destructive fishing practices. Use of fish poisons such as the derris plant ­ whose roots contain chemicals that stun the fish ­ in time ends up killing the reef. Guerreiro agreed that this work is very important and remarked on how delicate the marine ecosystem is: “Everything works together. The little critter on the reef, often unnoticed by many, is very important to ensure that corals flourish.”

    The next day, the fish team began surveying the northeast section of the island. Meanwhile, as part of our community engagement program I met with the sub-district administrator’s secretary to discuss the research and the future benefits it will bring to the community.

    “Knowledgeable people come in different forms, scientist and illiterates, but if they work together, we can better understand what is happening to our reef,” he said.

    “We need scientists to help us make sense of things. What we currently do may not be sustainable, so we need scientists to help us to see what … we need to stop doing, or do in a different way, to ensure that we can continue to get fish and that the ocean continues as bountiful as our grandfather told us it was generations ago.”

    Rui Pinto is the policy manager for CI-Timor-Leste. The <http://www.usctsp.org/>Coral Triangle Support Partnership is a collaboration between CI, WWF and The Nature Conservancy and the six national governments of the Coral Triangle. This is the first half of a two-part blog; stay tuned for the second part early next week.

-SOURCE: CI Blog