Wednesday, May 31, 2006

Le barrage qui réveille la forêt

Libération : Le barrage qui réveille la forêt:
Brésil

Fin mars, 200 chefs de l'ethnie kayapo unissent leurs forces pour protester contre la construction d'un barrage hydroélectrique, dans l'Amazonie brésilienne. Récit de cinq jours aux côtés des guerriers indiens.

par Eliane PATRIARCA
mercredi 31 mai 2006

Piaraçu, Amazonie brésilienne envoyée spéciale

"Soudain, ils sont là. Fiers, couverts de peintures noires jusqu'aux mollets, torses nus, tongs et bermudas, bracelets et colliers de perles. En un instant, après la longue route depuis Cuiabá, la capitale de l'Etat du Mato Grosso, puis la traversée en bac du fleuve Xingu, nous basculons dans un autre monde : celui des Indiens Kayapos. Nous sommes samedi 25 mars. Demain, les 200 chefs de cette ethnie seront rassemblés dans le village de Piaraçu pour contrer le projet de barrage de Belo Monte, sur le fleuve Xingu, dans l'Etat du Pará. Cet affluent de l'Amazone est inséparable de l'existence des 7 000 Kayapos qui vivent sur ses berges. Pour eux, le barrage est synonyme d'inondation des terres, de déplacement des familles, de déforestation et de pollution du fleuve. Une fois déjà, les Kayapos ont fait échouer le projet. C'était en 1989. Durant cinq jours, 600 d'entre eux et des membres de 40 autres ethnies avaient manifesté dans la ville d'Altamira contre la construction du complexe hydroélectrique. Cinq barrages en fait, qui allaient inonder 18 000 hectares de forêt et chasser des milliers d'Indiens. Sous la pression internationale, le gouvernement brésilien et la compagnie nationale Eletronorte avaient cédé. Mais, depuis 2001, le projet de barrage est de nouveau"

Wednesday, May 24, 2006

Natural reserves of Minshan and other conservation areas

BaiHe 百河
JiuZhaiGou 九寨沟
Wujiao 勿角
BaiYang 白羊
HuangLong 黄龙
XiaoZhaiZiGou 小寨子沟
Piankou 片口
QianFoShan 千佛山
WangLang 王朗
XiaoHeGou 小河沟
TangJiaHe 唐家河
MaoZhai 毛寨
DongYangGou 东阳沟
XueBaoDing 雪宝顶
BaiShuiJiang 白水江

BaoZuo 包座
Axia 阿夏
DuoEr 多儿
ChaGangLiang 插岗梁
JiuDingShan 九顶山
BaiShuiHe 白水河
LongXiHongKou 龙溪虹口
BaoDingGou 宝顶沟

Forest Farm:
NanPing ff 南坪
KuanBa ff 宽坝
PingWu ff 平武


About one aspect of the project going on there:
WWF - Panda Forests of Minshan - Nature Reserve Management and Capacity Building
A lots more there about Minshan Initiative (Integrated Project):
WWF China - Minshan Initiative

Friday, May 19, 2006

Interfax China

Interfax China: "'The local government showed a terrible attitude towards the UN investigations,' Wang said.

She said that during the delegation's visit to the Nu River Prefecture, situated on Yunnan's Tibetan border, local government workers had been employed to cover construction sites with cloth and conceal ships used for engineering."

Thursday, May 18, 2006

Chine : construction d'une centaine de centrales hydrauliques sur le cours supérieur du Yangtsé

Chine : construction d'une centaine de centrales hydrauliques sur le cours supérieur du Yangtsé: "D'ici 20 ans, la Chine projette de construire une centaine de centrales hydrauliques sur les rivières de Minjiang, Wujiang, Yalongjiang, Jialingjiang, affluents principaux et secondaires situés sur le cours supérieur du Yangtsé.

Les ressources hydrauliques sont très riches sur la rivière de Jinshajiang située sur le cours supérieur du Yangtsé, soit le sixième de celles du pays. La Chine va construire la plus grande base d'électricité hydraulique sur cette rivière.

D'après un plan élaboré, quatre centrales hydrauliques seront construites sur les sections du cours inférieur de cette rivière. La puissance installée des générateurs de ces quatre centrales sera de 38 millions de kW, soit deux barrages des Trois Gorges.

Par ailleurs, huit autres centrales hydrauliques seront construites sur les cours moyen et inférieur de la rivière de Jinshajiang avec une puissance installée de générateurs de 20,58 millions de kW.

La Chine a déjà construit 12 bases hydrauliques dans les régions de l'ouest du pays."

Tuesday, May 16, 2006

WWF China - organic food

new story about organic food and Minshan initiative on the wwf china website:
WWF China: "WWF is working with local communities in the Minshan panda habitat to promote a certification system for organic farming in the region. Representatives from the Sichuan Green Food Development Center recently visited communities neighboring Wanglang, Baihe and Baodinggou panda nature reserves in Minshan to promote organic and green food certification. The aim is to certify honey, black peppercorn, walnuts, berries and vegetables such as green peppers, tomatos, cabbage and carrots as green food in the near future."

Monday, May 15, 2006

WWF - Reuniting panda populations in China

WWF - Reuniting panda populations in China: "WWF's China Programme and the Chinese Forestry Department of Shaanxi Province has launched a programme to build up an ecological corridor to reunite two isolated panda populations.

A bamboo forest will be restored with the help of WWF volunteers to create a green corridor for giant panda sub-populations that were fragmented by a national highway."

People's Daily Online -- Bamboo tunnel to help panda groups reunite

People's Daily Online -- Bamboo tunnel to help panda groups reunite: "In 2005, WWF made a socio-economic survey and worked out the threats to giant pandas in the area. In September 2005, the international conservation organization co-operated with the nature reserve to begin restoring the giant panda habitat in the area. The project began yesterday is part of the effort.

'The project is an active and valuable attempt by WWF and our partners to connect the fragmented habitats in the Qinling Mountains,' said Dermot O'Gorman, representative of the WWF China Programme.

'We hope the green bamboo corridor can connect the panda populations separated by the highway, free the animal from human and traffic disturbance, and bring new hope to the conservation of wild giant pandas in Qinling.'"

Friday, May 12, 2006

WWF - TNC - WWF Alliance

WWF - TNC - WWF Alliance Newsletter, No. 6, March 2006: "TNC-WWF ALLIANCE@News is an electronic newsletter of The Nature Conservancy (TNC) and the World Wide Fund for Nature (WWF) Alliance to promote forest certification and combat illegal logging in Indonesia."

Green packaging

China Environmental News Digest: "Green packaging" demand to help environment: "China is working to develop 'green packaging' as part of its efforts to build an environment-friendly society, Vice-Premier Zeng Peiyan said yesterday.

He made the remarks when referring to the vast growth of packaging waste in the world at the World Packaging Conference, which opened in Beijing yesterday.

'The large increase of packaging waste has become a worldwide problem that deserves great attention,' Zeng said.

China's packaging industry attaches great importance to environmental protection and resource conservation, he added.

Zeng called for additional efforts to be made to promote green packaging by developing technologies of recycling waste or using degradable materials.

The packaging sector has witnessed robust growth in China. According to statistics from the China Packaging Federation, the total output of the nation's packaging industry reached US$50 billion last year, with a year-on-year growth of more than 20 per cent.

'A challenge for the Chinese packaging innovators is the creation of efficient packaging with the consumption of less energy and resources and less waste after use,' Alexis Stassinopoulos, president of the World Packaging Organization, said at"

Wednesday, May 10, 2006

First Giant Panda Released Into the Wild

First Giant Panda Is Released Into the Wild: "With two barks and a charge at a film crew, Xiang Xiang the panda today became the first captive-born giant panda to be released into the wild."

the panda was released in the western end of the Wolong Nature Reserve, a mountainous region covering 770 square miles (1,994 square kilometers) with a hundred peaks more than 16,400 feet (5,000 meters) high.

"It's an area that's known to be frequented by other pandas,"


Supported by funding from the National Geographic Society, USCEF and research institutes are working to identify potential new giant panda habitat in the Sichuan Giant Panda Sanctuary.


"Even if captive-bred pandas are successfully released into the wild, WWF does not believe that captive breeding alone is an effective conservation method to save giant pandas," said Dermot O'Gorman, WWF China's country representative.

"Protecting the pandas' habitat is the most important step in giant panda conservation," he said.