Monday, June 30, 2008

Beijing pollution still high, now threatens Olympics events

Reuters reports that although the Beijing Olympics are only two months away, the threat of still present and high air pollution levels could cause delays in endurance events like the marathon:

Sunday, June 29, 2008

First shared bikes, now shared cars

Paris introduced the bike sharing program called Velib a year ago (with much success), now they plan to do the same with electric cars.

The Guardian newspaper reports that 4,000 electric cars, called Autolib, will be put to use around the city and its outlying areas - and it will be the first electric car sharing scheme in the world:
"Paris city hall said 700 Autolib pick-up points would be set up across the Paris area, 200 of which will be underground. A driver could pick up a car, for example, in the east of the city and drop it off in the west after a short journey."
Read the full story: Paris plans help-yourself green car hire

Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Low-cost Euro airlines + more flyers = carbon upsurge

The New York Times reports on how the popularity of low-cost European airlines has upped air travel across the continent and thus also the rise in carbon emissions.

Warm countries such as Spain are seeing the increase in weekend tourists from colder climes such as the U.K. and Germany, which although good for the tourist industry, just adds to the global warming conundrum.

The competitiveness of the budget airlines keeps the prices low as well as being much cheaper and faster than car or train travel:
"[For] many, the economics of flying cheap are proving more compelling than the environmental consequences. With prices for gas and hotels at all-time highs in Britain and Germany, it is, somewhat bizarrely, more economical to fly to Spain, even for a weekend, than to take a traditional driving vacation near home."
Read the full story: Air travel and carbon on increase in Europe

Monday, June 23, 2008

Machu Picchu porters overworked and underpaid

USA Today reports how the exploding popularity of Peru's Inca Trail trek is also overtaxing and underpaying the porters who tote tourists' luggage.

All tourists who want to make the historic hike must now go with a guided tour that can cost hundreds of dollars - and to lure in budget travelers some companies cheapen their prices by paying their porters less but requiring them to haul more weight.

Although a law in 2003 made it mandatory for porters to make $15 a day and only carry 57 pounds - it's easy for companies to dismiss and porters happy to make any money still work for less:
"Victor, 22, [said he was carrying over-regulation weight — 66 pounds — for $9 dollars a day and complained bitterly about not getting enough food,] as he labored alone on the final ascent to Warmiwanusca, Quechua for "Dead Woman's Pass," the grisly name for the trail's highest point at 13,779 feet.

Unlike porters with other agencies, Victor didn't have a water bottle and his dry, cracked toes jutted out from the end of worn-down sandals, covered in dust from the trail.

Jorge Villasante, Peru's vice labor minister, acknowledges that enforcing the 2003 law is a problem."
Read the full story: Machu Picchu tourism boom puts extra burden on Inca Trail porters

Sunday, June 22, 2008

Wash. state's record snowpack brings waterfalls

The Seattle Post-Intelligencer reports on the spectacular season for waterfalls this summer due to a record winter snowfall.

Around 10,000 waterfalls will spew forth from the Cascades.

Waterfall watchers say this year will beat the last record season of 1999.

And intrepid "baggers" are happy to go off the beaten path for remote sightings:
"Oh, it's stunningly beautiful," says Sprague Ackley of Seattle, a climber and whitewater kayaker who reached Service Falls [located] in a high and remote canyon on the upper Queets River in the heart of Olympic National Park."
Read the full story: The land of 10,000 waterfalls

Friday, June 20, 2008

California sans car

The San Jose Mercury News reports on a few vacation spots that are easy to get to by public transportation. And once at the place visitors can get around by foot, horse or even Segway.

The three popular spots highlighted are Angel Island, Old Sacramento and San Luis Obispo - all are easily accessible by train from San Jose.

Read the full story: Gas-free getaways

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Green recognition for European car rental agency

Europcar, the European car rental agency, has been environmentally conscious for a decade and has finally received green certification, reports breakingtravelnews.com.

Being named into the "Green Charter" by Bureau Veritas Certification is "regarded [as] a crucial benchmark for developing a sustainable business:"
"Europcar took its first eco-friendly measures 10 years ago with the opening of an 'environmental station' in Paris. It was also the first car rental company in Europe to offer hybrid and electric cars, and it regularly introduces new, cleaner-energy models into its fleet. In France, Europcar has won the “Oxygen Awards” twice for its environmental efforts. The company is currently implementing an electronic rental contract system which substantially reduces paper consumption."
Read the full story: Europcar awarded first ever green charter

Friday, June 13, 2008

Japanese car runs on water

Reuters reports on a Japanese car that runs on only water.

Hydrogen - extracted from the water through an energy generator - powers the vehicle.

Watch the report:

Thursday, June 12, 2008

Asia and global warming

China and India are both high-population and fast-emerging economies that are also altering their climates drastically by emitting some of the highest amounts of carbon dioxide worldwide.

The Economist reports how the effect of these greenhouse gases is changing the climate, melting the Himalayan glaciers and shifting weather patterns - all things that are affecting the health and livelihoods of their citizens. Both countries are realizing their contributions to the problem and are beginning to work on solutions.

Read the full story: Melting Asia

Tuesday, June 10, 2008

Tiger bone wine - illegal but still for sale

The BBC reports that tiger bone wine - made with endangered tiger carcasses - is still being sold illegally at animal parks in China.

The wine, sold in tiger-shaped vessels like the one pictured above, is made by soaking dead tiger bodies in rice wine. Benefits to the drinker's health are the reasons for drinking the brew.

The British Environmental Investigation Agency said advertisements for the illegal drink were shown blatantly in the parks and visitors were openly solicited to buy it.

Read the full story: Chinese parks sell 'tiger wine'

Monday, June 9, 2008

Vandals disturb NC beach nesting areas

National Parks Traveler reports that protected bird and turtle nesting beach areas in North Carolina's Cape Hatteras National Seashore are being deliberately trampled on.

The seasonal beach closures are to ensure the nesting and breeding success of endangered native plovers, oyster catchers and turtles - without the harmful effects from off-road vehicles.

Several acts of vandalism have occurred in closed-off areas:
"Rangers on June 4th closed another section of the park beach due to a plover hatch. On Thursday, June 5th, several visitors expressed opposition to this closure. One person deliberately entered the area and was dealt with by law enforcement personnel."
Read the full story: Bird nests and closures spurring civil disobedience

Saturday, June 7, 2008

Honduras: an ecotourism paradise or claim to lure tourists?

In this month's Slate.com Well-Traveled section Elisabeth Eaves explores what ecotourism means in Honduras.

She points out the ironies of the tourism industry's eco-promise versus the not-so-eco realities.

And she even selflessly points out that tourists - including herself - are also to blame for ruining the environment:
"On our last day on the coast, I floated facedown in the Caribbean, toting up my sins. I had flown in an airplane, taken taxis instead of buses, requested air conditioning, run the air conditioning even after I realized I couldn't shut one of my windows, and bought small plastic bottles of water. That was all before sundown on my first day. Subsequently, I had participated in the feeding of wild animals, been driven around in gasoline-powered cars and boats, eaten conch (I didn't know it was threatened), and—this one hadn't even occurred to me until I read it in a guidebook—worn sunscreen and DEET-laden bug repellent while swimming above the delicate corals. But I had no idea how to weigh all that against whatever minuscule economic benefit I might have been bringing to Honduras."
At least she admits to her eco-sins while most travel writers do not, but if one is writing a story about ecotourism at least one should try to be a little more eco-friendly than she was. To Ecotravel News her story seems like just a ruse to write an article while enjoying a tropical vacation as opposed to really caring about the environment and doing something to make a difference.

Read the full story: Eco-touring in Honduras

Friday, June 6, 2008

Bolivia's model rainforest protection scheme

The Christian Science Monitor reports on the Bolivian rainforest conservancy project that could be a world-wide model for fighting deforestation and global warming.

The Bolivian government along with conservancy groups and energy companies came together to save the rainforest in a first-of-its-kind plan called Noel Kempff Climate Action Project.

This venture sparked a carbon-reducing initiative called Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation, or REDD, which environmentalists criticized:
"But REDD is now seen as a leading solution to deforestation, which accounts for 20 percent of the world’s annual greenhouse-gas emissions – more than the transportation sector, according to the Center for International Forestry Research...

In Bolivia, the idea has been tested at the widest scale: The project bought out four timber concessions, nearly doubled the national park’s boundaries, and set up a carbon-monitoring system by which offsets are awarded to three participating energy companies (American Electric Power, BP, and PacifiCorp.) and the Bolivian government – offsets that could be traded on the voluntary carbon-trading market, and (in the case of the Bolivian government) the money reinvested in the communities affected."
Read the full story: Bolivia gets clean by staying green

Thursday, June 5, 2008

Old Faithful less faithful

The San Jose Mercury News reports that Old Faithful - the iconic geyser in Yellowstone National Park - has become less faithful because of drought conditions.

A U.S. Geological survey conducted over nine years by Shaul Hurwitz found that it now takes 1.5 hours for an eruption as opposed to just about one hour before 1959:
"Hurwitz's study examined data from five reliable geysers, including Old Faithful, from 1997 to 2006. The winter of 1997 in Yellowstone and surrounding mountains was the wettest in at least 100 years, but drought has prevailed in the area for much of this decade."
Read the full story: Drought slowing down Old Faithful geyser

Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Resort threatens Grenadian bird

The Christian Science Monitor reports that a new resort to be built in a protected park on the Caribbean island of Grenada could wipe-out the already endangered native dove.

Mount Hartman National Park - one of the few undeveloped areas of the island and a sanctuary for the native dove - is now set to build a Four Seasons uber-resort. Only 120 doves remain of which about half live in Mt. Hartman.

Protests from conservation groups have led to a compromise to help preserve the already small numbers of the bird:
"Under the current plan, the resort will develop areas that are currently part of the Mt. Hartman National Park. But in exchange, the resort’s developer will help underwrite the designation and management of a newer, better, and similarly sized sanctuary nearby. Pets and pesticides will be prohibited at the resort, which will be built in phases timed to minimize disruption of the birds’ seasonal activities."
Read the full story: Will new resort imperil Grenada's endangered dove?

Monday, June 2, 2008

Biofuels push out peasants

The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) published a report for their food summit that condemns biofuels for not only adding to the global food crisis, but also for pushing out low-income peasant farmers from their land, says Reuters:
"'Specific social groups such as pastoralists, shifting cultivators and women are especially liable to suffer exclusion from land caused by rising land values, while people who are already landless are likely to see the barriers to land access increase further,' [the report] said."
Read the full story: Biofuel land demand puts peasants at risk: report