RUSSIAN GOVERNMENT MOVES TO
PROTECT CRITICALLY ENDANGERED WHALES

Environmental Panorama
International
May of 2011


Posted on 27 May 2011
Companies seeking oil extraction rights to a newly available concession off Russia’s Sakhalin Island will not be permitted to conduct activities while Western gray whales are present. The seasonal restriction, imposed by the Russian government, will require developers to conduct activities only from late November to late May, when the whales are away from their summer feeding grounds around the island.

The new regulation applies to only one section of the waters surrounding Sakhalin, although numerous companies have active projects in other areas close to the whales’ feeding habitat. There are currently four off-shore oil and gas platforms near Sakhalin in Russian Far East, but the development of additional platforms is planned.

The waters around the island are the primary feeding habitats for critically endangered Western gray whales and their calves. There may be fewer than 130 of the whales remaining.

Activities needed for oil exploration, such as seismic testing, can disrupt the whales’ behaviour or even cause them to abandon their feeding area.

"WWF welcomes this seasonal restriction and urges authorities to expand the regulation to include all other off-shore projects near Sakhalin,” said Aleksey Knizhnikov, WWF-Russia’s Oil & Gas Environmental Policy Officer. “While the whales await this much needed protection, WWF calls on operators to halt their dangerous off-shore activities during this summer’s feeding season, including Sakhalin Energy’s planned seismic survey.”

Whales will begin to arrive to Sakhalin next month and scientists will be on hand to observe the animals’ physical condition. The number of whales and their ‘skinniness’ will be analysed to determine the impacts of last summer’s seismic testing. Three seismic surveys were conducted in or near whale feeding habitat last summer and are believed to have caused severe pressure on the animals. Several surveys are being planned by oil developers for this summer.

Sakhalin Energy, a consortium that includes oil giant Shell, recently revealed plans to construct a new off-shore platform close to the whales’ feeding habitat, and plans to conduct seismic surveys this summer to determine the exact location of the platform. A coalition of environmental organizations, including WWF, has urged Sakhalin Energy to halt all activities relating to the new platform until an assessment has been made of the cumulative impacts the numerous different oil and gas projects have on the whales.

The Russian government’s directive highlights the need for establishing protected zones for Western gray whales, an initiative WWF has supported for a number of years. The document also stresses that specialized observers are necessary to monitor the impact of oil and gas development on the whales.

“We commend the government for its leadership in prohibiting industrial activities when the whales are present in this area,” Knizhnikov said. “We look forward to the implementation of additional measures to fully mitigate the impact of oil development around Sakhalin Island.”

+ More

States unite to protect primeval European forests

Posted on 27 May 2011
Bratislava, Slovakia: Europe's largest areas of old growth forests outside Russia are to be protected across the seven country span of the Carpathian Mountains.

The commitment comes in the form of a Protocol on Sustainable Forest Management, signed today in Bratislava, Slovakia, by ministers of all the Carpathian Convention countries - the Czech Republic, Hungary, Poland, Romania, Serbia, Slovakia and Ukraine.

“The Forestry Protocol under the Carpathian Convention joins a growing number of legislative tools and political commitments, including new EU legislation on illegal logging as well as the EU Habitats and Birds Directives for addressing the loss of these forest treasures - it is essential that these commitments are now put into practice”, said Andreas Beckmann, Director of the WWF Danube-Carpathian Programme. .

Early tasks under the protocol include the identification and protection of natural, especially virgin forests.

Many areas being felled

Some 300,000 hectares of old growth or primeval forest are thought to exist in the Carpathian Mountains, a small remnant of the vast forests that covered Europe. They include over 10,000 ha of magnificent beech forests in eastern Slovakia and western Ukraine that have been included in the UNESCO World Heritage List as well as areas in the southern Carpathians of Romania that make up Europe’s greatest unfragmented forest area.

Unfortunately, many of these areas are being felled. Only 18% of the 250,000 ha of Romanian old growth forests are inside protected areas. In Slovakia, only 0.47% of forests could be considered old growth, as demonstrated by a thorough field study undertaken in 2010. Prior to the study, it had been thought that at least 2% of forest area could be considered old growth.

The Protocol also aims to maintain or enlarge forest cover as well as improve protective forest functions such as preventing floods, landslides and in general water cycle regulation.

“In the International Year of the Forest, the governments of the seven Carpathian countries have committed themselves to protecting and preserving Europe’s greatest remaining forest treasures, including the continent’s largest remaining areas of natural and virgin forests outside of Russia, which are in urgent need of protection,” Beckmann said.

New EU legislation on addressing illegal logging requires EU member states to take specific measures to address the problem of illegal logging, which has been a major problem in the Carpathian region.

An online timber tracking tool developed by the Romanian Forest Agency Romsilva can support implementation of the Forestry Protocol and EU legislation and provides a good example for other countries. Romania has also been one of the pioneers in the Carpathian region in promoting responsible forest management, with some 2 million hectares of forest on track for certification under the Forest Stewardship Council (FSC).

 
 

Source: WWF – World Wildlife Foundation International
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