Archive for May, 2014

European Union Wants Ban on Drift Nets to Save Dolphins, Tuna

Brussels: The European Union's (EU) executive yesterday proposed to ban all use of drift nets in EU waters and on its vessels by year's end to better enforce the protection of dolphins, sharks, swordfish and bluefin tuna.

Drift nets stretching for miles close to the surface have often been responsible for the incidental capture and killing of thousands of marine animals that are important to the ecosystem. They were also responsible for indiscriminate fishing that often resulted in huge by-caches with little commercial value.

Often they were called the "walls of death" since they trapped and killed anything within nets that could measure dozens of kilometres.

"Fishing with drift nets destroys marine habitats, endangers marine wildlife and threatens sustainable fisheries," said EU Fisheries Commissioner Maria Damanaki.

These type of nets were previously used in the hunt for endangered bluefin tuna in the Mediterranean until the EU banned such fishing in 2002. Even if laws already restricted its use, drift net fishing often continued illegally and a total ban on drift nets would make catching cheats easier. The EU courts had to take action against Italy and France half a decade ago to stop such practices.

The proposal now goes to the EU's 28 member states for approval.

"We need to close any possible loopholes and simplify control and enforcement. The ban sends out a clear message that we no longer tolerate any irresponsible practices," said Damanaki.

The Pew Charitable Trusts said that yesterday's proposal showed the EU's "willingness to crack down on the illegal fishing of bluefin tuna."

Over the past years the EU has stepped up its efforts to clamp down on any kind of illegal fishing and on commercial fishing which depleted the Atlantic and Mediterranean oceans off its borders.

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European Union Wants Ban on Drift Nets to Save Dolphins, Tuna

EU Carbon Permits Fall Most in Three Weeks on Expanded Surplus

European Union carbon permits fell the most in almost three weeks in London after the market regulator said yesterday a surplus of the emission allowances expanded last year.

Permits for December dropped 6.8 percent, the most since April 25, to 4.81 euros ($6.60) a metric ton at 4:40 p.m. in London on the ICE Futures Europe exchange. The contract slid as much as 8.5 percent earlier today. The allowances dropped for a third consecutive year in 2013.

The glut swelled to more than 2.1 billion tons by the end of 2013 from almost 2 billion tons a year earlier, the European Commission, the EUs executive arm, said yesterday. That exceeds the 1.9 billion tons emitted in all of 2013 by factories and power stations covered by the market, according to EU data published today.

Theres going to be more downward pressure on the market, as the surplus is sold or given away, said Trevor Sikorski, an analyst in London at Energy Aspects Ltd. Sales of allowances by traders to close out bets on gains probably worsened todays decline, he said by phone.

Falling natural gas prices are enticing some utilities to switch to the cleaner-burning fuel from coal, cutting demand for carbon permits, Sikorski said. The within-day U.K. natural gas contract dropped as much as 2.6 percent today and is down 32 percent this year, broker data compiled by Bloomberg show.

Youre getting more gas in the mix, especially in the U.K., Sikorski said.

The EUs 28 member states are divided three ways on fixing 2030 climate and energy rules, Greek Environment Minister Yiannis Maniatis said yesterday. Some countries approve the commissions Jan. 22 proposal to reduce emissions by 40 percent from 1990 levels, others have reservations about that plan and a third group wants more ambitious policies, he said.

Trading in the December contract jumped 43 percent today to 32.6 million tons, the highest for almost three weeks. Volume of call options cleared on ICE jumped to 2.9 million tons, also the highest since April 25, from 1 million tons yesterday.

To contact the reporter on this story: Mathew Carr in London at m.carr@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Lars Paulsson at lpaulsson@bloomberg.net Claudia Carpenter, Dan Weeks

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EU Carbon Permits Fall Most in Three Weeks on Expanded Surplus

EU proposes complete ban on drift-net fishing

BRUSSELS: The European Union said on Wednesday it wants a complete ban by 2015 on drift-net fishing, dubbed by environmentalists as 'walls of death' for killing other marine animals, especially dolphins.

Drift-nets, often vast lengths of near-invisible nylon netting floating near the sea surface, have been banned since 2002 for migratory fisheries but the rules are being flouted, the European Commission said.

Accordingly, there should now be a full EU ban on the drift-nets, which the Commission said kill "marine mammals, sea turtles and sea birds which are mostly protected," a statement said.

"I am convinced that the only way to eradicate this once and for all is to have clear rules which leave no room for interpretation," said EU Fisheries Commissioner Maria Damanaki.

Despite the 2002 restriction, drift nets have continued to be used for smaller fish such as sardines and anchovies in the Mediterranean and other areas but they are indiscriminate, entangling anything that tries to swim through them.

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EU proposes complete ban on drift-net fishing

EU should increase funding of energy infrastructure – PM Sobotka

Bratislava - The European Union should look for ways to increase the volume of funding it provides to co-finance important energy infrastructure from its budget, Czech Prime Minister Bohuslave Sobotka (Social Democrats, CSSD) said at international conference Globsec in Bratislava today.

Energy security was a topic discussed by prime ministers of Visegrad Group countries at the Globsec conference today. The group comprises the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Poland and Hungary.

The prime ministers agreed that it is necessary to secure better interconnection of European markets, above all of the markets for gas, and reduce dependence on Russia.

The EU has a list of projects of international importance, for which co-financing mechanisms could be looked for, according to Sobotka.

Sufficient co-funding from the EU could motivate private investors to participate in building energy infrastructure, Sobotka said.

Slovak Prime Minister Robert Fico said energy security is an absolute priority for the Visegrad Group.

The individual states must work on technical measures which will extend the possibilities of the so-called reversed flow, according to Fico. If a country lacks gas, a neighbouring state can help it thanks to the reverse flow, although gas flows in an apposite direction under normal circumstances, Fico said.

Fico also mentioned the importance of gas interconnection on the North-South axis running through Poland, Slovakia and Hungary.

Czech and Slovak prime ministers welcome the efforts of Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk to create en energy union in the EU, which would ensure energy security to its member states. Now it is necessary to negotiate the specific steps that would lead to the the creation of the union, Sobotka and Fico said.

Tusk started to promote strongly the establishment of the energy union in April in reaction to the crisis in Ukraine, and the steps Moscow took in the crisis.

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EU should increase funding of energy infrastructure - PM Sobotka

Afghanistan News Update – March 21, 2012 – Video


Afghanistan News Update - March 21, 2012
This edition features a story about the precision necessary in construction and a Veterinarian at Bagram Airfield. Includes sound bites from Petty Officer 3rd Class Mark Caudle, Navy Seabee...

By: usmilitaryvideo

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Afghanistan News Update - March 21, 2012 - Video