Climate Change
Tuesday, November 29th, 2011
The Hawaiian culture places great emphasis on the word “Aloha,” which means love, peace, compassion, and charity. Hawaiians greet and bid farewell to their guests with Aloha. Unfortunately, there was no Aloha at this year’s APEC Summit (Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation) in Honolulu, Hawaii. Sadly, a local Hawaiian youth was killed on the first day of the summit after scuffling with a U.S. federal agent who was hired as a security guard for the multi-day event. This caused bewilderment and a wave of protes
ts from locals.
Honolulu, normally a peaceful vacation town, was not very friendly during the week of the summit and seemed to escalate into chaos. Roads were closed for world leaders and their entourages, causing massive traffic jams. According to witnesses, just the Chinese delegation alone, arrived with 1,000 members and that was only one of the 21 delegations in attendance. Thousands of armed soldiers and federal agents patrolled the perimeter of the tourist part of Honolulu-Waikiki, where the summit took place. Displaying weapons to cause fear in peaceful people is, unfortunately, a common practice in many countries. The meeting was held on Hawaii, far from the US mainland, where large-scale protests were unlikely. Yet, authorities and the APEC planning committee apparently decided to take special measures in light of recent Occupy Movement Protests in most large US cities. To give you a sense of how much security was there, the US government spent $44 million to prepare for the summit, including $18 million for police and $10 million for “contingency expenses” such as 700 thousand units of non-lethal weapons, including 25 thousand pepper sprays, and even 3 thousand tasers, all purchased by American taxpayers.
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Posted in Biodiversity, Climate Change, Communities, Freshwater, Global, Oceans, Policy, Russia | Comments Off
Wednesday, September 21st, 2011
I think I am one of the luckiest people out there to be doing the work I am very passionate about, being able to travel, meeting some of the most wonderful people around the globe and being able to connect those people in order to make positive change.
I recently traveled to Nome, Alaska for the Beringia Days Conference organized by the Shared Beringian Heritage Program of National Park Service (NPS). The conference was first held in 1997 and since then it alternated between both sides of the Bering Strait. This year it was Alaska’s turn to host the conference. Nome welcomed more than 130 people. Among them were native people of Alaska and Chukotka, Russian and American scholars, researchers, environmentalists, and representatives of government and non-governmental organizations.
The goal of the conference was to bring together various stakeholders for discussions around issues affecting communities both in Chukotka and Alaska. Some of the major topics covered during the conference were international cooperation, creation of the Shared Beringia Heritage Trans-boundary Protected Area, preservation of culture and language, youth programs, environmental issues including resource extraction, increased shipping, and pollution. Special attention was paid to marine mammal research and impacts of climate change on subsistence resources of indigenous peoples.
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Tags: Bering Sea, Bering Strait, Eskimo, Indigenous
Posted in Alaska, Arctic, Biodiversity, Climate Change, Communities, Issues, Regions, Russia | Comments Off
Friday, August 12th, 2011
Agricultural burning and resultant forest fires are much more than a public health and safety threat for Russia – rampant burning sends thick plumes of black carbon to the North during the spring and summer, leaving a dark layer on Arctic ice when the sun shines the longest, causing the ice to warm and melt at an increased rate. Pacific Environment is supporting several community-based projects in Russia to change burning behavior in the long term, with the hope that reduced black carbon emissions will buy time for the Arctic.

Photo credit: Audrey Wood, July 2011. Greenpeace Volunteer Program Director Grigorii Kuksin creates a model scenario in which an uncontrolled field fire spreads to a forest and then to a village on the other side, demonstrating to campers (all farmers’ kids) the importance of responsible burning practices.
During my recent bicoastal trip to Russia, I had the great opportunity to visit with two of Pacific Environment’s partner organizations for an up close and personal look at the incredible work these groups are doing locally to reduce seasonal agricultural burning and forest fires.
My first visit was with Greenpeace-Russia at their summer youth camp called “Let’s Restore Our Forests!”, located in the Meshcherskii National Park in the Ryazan region. The annual camp brings together children from rural farming communities for lessons in forest ecology, local botany, forest restoration (elementary), and fire safety basics; it is also this summer’s base camp for the Greenpeace volunteer fire brigade, so the crew doesn’t have to drive out from Moscow to fight local fires. When I arrive near the end of July, the rotating cast of Greenpeace staff and volunteers from Moscow and other regional towns has been fighting local fires for a month – mostly underground peat fires that smolder in dried-out bogs throughout European Russia.
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Tags: black carbon, climate change, Fires, Forest Fire, Russia
Posted in Climate Change, Russia | Comments Off
Thursday, August 4th, 2011
By Rosemary Ahtuangaruak
As an Inupiat who lives on the coast of the Arctic Ocean, I live a traditional lifestyle — hunting, fishing, whaling, gathering, and sharing our traditional way of life as our elders taught me. It is my duty to ensure the lifestyle that was passed down throughout generations continues in the face of multiple threats, including increased shipping.
As sea ice continues to recede in the Arctic, we are seeing an increase in the vessels that travel through our ocean. These ships can harm the marine environment with increased noise and pollution. Currently, the International Maritime Organization (IMO) is developing a mandatory set of regulations for vessels traveling in Arctic waters. However, they are doing it with little input from the people who will be most impacted by increased shipping.
Indigenous peoples who live a traditional way of life have an inherent right to make decisions about regulations that will impact us. I am calling on the U.S. delegation to the IMO, who has an obligation to consult with Tribes, to guarantee our concerns are addressed.
Tags: Arctic waters, IMO, Indigenous, noise pollution, pollution, Shipping
Posted in Alaska, Arctic, Climate Change, Communities, Oceans, Uncategorized | Comments Off
Thursday, June 16th, 2011
Last week, Pacific Environment successfully concluded one of three annual exchanges that support our programmatic efforts and provide opportunities for our partner organizations from Russia to gain new perspectives and build organizational capacity. The purpose of the exchange was to bring 4 -5 indigenous leaders and scholars working on indigenous issues from Kamchatka and Yakutia to North America to learn about sacred sites protection in the United States. We invited two of our longtime partners from Kamchatka, native Itelmen women Nina Zaporotskaya and Nastya Chukhman, along with Venera Sukhareva, an indigenous Koryak and the chair of the local Indigenous Association. Joining them were two indigenous Sakha peoples; Valentina Dmitrieva, a 20-year veteran of the environmental movement, and Viliam Yakovlev, an ethnographer and a cultural expert.
Our participants met with Native American tribal and NGO leaders in New Mexico, Arizona, Nevada, and South Lake Tahoe to learn about of the methodology of protecting sacred sites and indigenous lands. During the exchange, our Russian participants convened with their peers from the Navajo, Acoma, Washoe, Paiute, and Hopi nations to share experiences and learn from each other. Our Russian guests gained first-hand knowledge of how sacred sites and indigenous lands are protected and managed in the United States. Participants learned the tools needed to educate members of their local communities about sacred sites protection, how to lead efforts to protect sacred sites in Russia, and how to facilitate intercultural exchanges between native communities in the United States and indigenous communities in Russia.
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Posted in Climate Change, Communities, Energy, Issues, Regions, Russia | Comments Off
Thursday, May 19th, 2011
This year I had the opportunity to attend the UN Permanent Forum on Indigenous Issues which was held in New York City from May 16th – 27th. In addition, my name was put forward by Chickaloon Village Tribal Council members to the Tribal Link Foundation who sponsored their annual three day Project Access Permanent Forum training. I had the honor of attending both the training as well as the first few days of the Permanent Forum.
The Permanent Forum is one of three UN bodies that are mandated to deal specifically with indigenous peoples’ issues. The others are the Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples and the Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights and fundamental freedoms of indigenous Peoples.
The Permanent Forum is an advisory body to the Economic and Social Council with a mandate to discuss indigenous issues related to economic and social development, culture, the environment, education, health and human rights. According to its mandate, the Permanent Forum will:
1) Provide expert advice and recommendations on indigenous issues to the Council, as well as to programs, funds and agencies of the United Nations, through the Council.
2) Raise awareness and promote the integration and coordination of activities related to indigenous issues within the UN system.
3) Prepare and disseminate information on indigenous issues. (more…)
Tags: Alaska, Arctic, community partners, Indigenous
Posted in Alaska, Arctic, Climate Change, Communities, Energy, Issues, Regions | Comments Off
Friday, February 4th, 2011
A western gray whale named Flex has been receiving media attention worldwide for being the first of his kind to be tagged and tracked. He is a 13 year old western gray whale that was tagged on October 4th, 2010 by Russian and American scientists off of Sakhalin Island in eastern Russia.
His precedence is not the only thing gaining him fame though; his unpredictable path in the last four months has also been gaining him attention. Scientists and researchers are baffled by his movements, but then again, they humbly admit they did not really know where western gray whales should be going in the first place. (more…)
Tags: Alaska, Arctic, Endangered species, Energy, environment, Kamchatka, Russia, Sakhalin, seismic testing, Whale
Posted in Alaska, Arctic, Biodiversity, Climate Change, Energy, Featured, Russia | Comments Off
Friday, January 28th, 2011
In December of 2009, the U.S. Ex Im Bank gave a record $3 Billion dollars in financing to ExxonMobil for a controversial Liquefied Natural Gas (LNG) project in Papua New Guinea. NGOs and Civil Society groups in Papua New Guinea and abroad warned Ex Im Bank that this project’s pipeline would slice through tribal lands and stir conflicts among local people. And, as predicted, that’s exactly what happened.
Early this week, an outbreak of violence was reportedly sparked by the recent death of a child near the project site. Villagers reportedly attacked employees of an international contractor to the gas project which led to the shutdown of work at one of the LNG project sites. Disputes between local landowners and the $15 billion dollar LNG project are nothing new and have been reported several times since the project was sanctioned in 2009. The project was disrupted even last week when landowners protested that they hadn’t received the benefits they have been promised from this project. In February 2010, four people were reportedly killed when fighting broke out over a land dispute and there have been several other shutdowns of the project due to similar issues with landowners and tribal communities.
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Tags: Energy, energy subsidies, Export Credit Agencies, Finance, LNG
Posted in Climate Change, Energy, Global, Issues, Policy, Regions | Comments Off
Monday, October 18th, 2010
While Sunday 10/10/10 was celebrated all over the world by activists as “Global Warming Work Party” and now known as the “Biggest Day of Climate Action”, I was fortunate enough to participate in Pacific Environment’s Vessel Watch trip to the Gulf of the Farallones National Marine Sanctuary to collect and record data on whales (humpbacks, blue whales, etc) and help raise awareness about the impacts of shipping traffic on our magnificent marine life that frequent this sanctuary.

Vessel Watch Trip Leaving San Francisco Bay
On board the 65’ Catamaran “KittyKat” were experienced naturalists plus my colleague Jackie Dragon, the director of our Marine Sanctuaries Program; fellow colleagues and researchers; and several members of the public who for the first time were going to see and hear these amazing creatures in the wild. The trip took us 27 miles beyond the Golden Gate to the Farallon Islands, a group of six small islands and giant rocks near the edge of the continental shelf. The sanctuary supports an abundance of life, including many threatened or endangered species – including the humpback whale, blue whale, great white shark and even killer whales. The naturalist informed us that just two weeks ago they saw pods of the endangered northern right whale dolphins, an extremely rare sighting. There are three typical seasons where researchers come out to collect data and they are – birds, whales and sharks. Right now is great white shark season and the Farallons are heavily frequented by shark cage divers.
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Tags: California, climate change, Marine, Shipping, Whales
Posted in Biodiversity, California, Climate Change, Oceans | 1 Comment »
Friday, October 1st, 2010
With his veto pen in hand yesterday, Governor Schwarzenegger missed a huge opportunity to leave a real environmental legacy. Instead, he demonstrated his disregard for California’s priceless marine environment and its billion dollar associated economy, swiftly undermining our ability to respond to the next devastating oil spill. The governor vetoed AB 234 (D- Huffman), a bill that would have been a triple-win when it comes to protecting our state from oil spills.
If signed, the legislation would have required a safety precaution known as pre-booming – placing oil containment boom in the water – during the fuel transfer operations that take place daily in California’s coastal waters. This technique could have prevented the Dubai Star tanker from spilling over 500 gallons into San Francisco Bay last October. In addition to this increased protection, the bill included a timely take-a-way from the BP gulf oil tragedy and would have insured that the 27 oil rigs in California state waters are equipped with fully redundant safety mechanisms to prevent a blowout here.
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Tags: Shipping
Posted in California, Climate Change, Energy, Oceans, Policy | Comments Off