Categories
Activism Environment Photography

[1279] Of the tapir to hike the Klang Gate

It is two hours to Monday and I am already suffering from Monday blue. I browsed through my album and this tapir lightened things up a bit for me.

Some rights reserved. By Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams

The Path Finders of the Malaysian Nature Society is organizing a day hike to Bukit Tabur at the Klang Gate some time in the coming September. I am responsible to organize the trip and so, currently, I am looking at September 8, the last Saturday before the Ramadan begins.

At the same time, I am hoping for a haze-free day. Kuala Lumpur last Friday was shrouded with haze and that worries me.

In the meantime, I need to do some recon (interestingly, some people call it recce) work in the area and am planning to do it on July 21 and that is a Saturday. Anybody want to join me for a day hike in July?

Categories
Activism Environment Photography

[1278] Of visiting Kota Damansara Community Forest Park

I finally visited the Kota Damansara Community Forest Park yesterday. The Malaysian Nature Society was organizing an environmental program for girl guide brigades from several schools around Kuala Lumpur and Society needed hands. I helped out and in doing so, I fulfilled a promise that I made to myself not too long ago.

When I first saw it, I was impressed. Whether it is a large pond or a small lake, the view is marvelous in the morning with slight mist in the air, with dead tree trunks coming out from the bottom of water bowl. Only the sky was uncooperative by being cloudy but with only a little hint of turquoise.

Some rights reserved. By Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams.

Closer inspection however brought me disgust. Trash was everywhere. Instead of being protected as the oldest forest reserve in Malaysia, at the moment, it is a mini-dump yard.

Categories
Economics Environment

[1263] Of new waste management bills

Finally, on the surface at least, sensible new policies:

People who waste more will have to pay more and every household will have to start separating recyclable items from other waste.

These are two of the implications of the Solid Waste Management and Public Clean-Up Bill, which the Housing and Local Government Ministry expects to table in parliament in two weeks. [Start sorting out and recycling your waste. NST. June 17 2007]

To be honest, I have not read the bills. The website of the Parliament is not so helpful and its search function is not working at all. Therefore, I am quite unclear what the bills are specifically seeking for other than the establishment of a government-owned centralized waste management entity. It is hard to form some sort of opinion without proper information.

I am unsure how the service providers are going to enforce that pay-as-you-go system. Under that model, the providers would need to identify which trash belongs to whom. It is easy imagine that waste owners would try to dump their waste at public space and then disown the trash to escape the need to pay for trash collection altogether. The property rights of the waste must be properly enforced to ensure the success of the model.

Another matter concerns recycling. The bill wants to make recycling mandatory but I prefer to provide consumers with incentive to recycling rather than coercing them. A good system would reward those that separate their trash by charging them less. In other word, offer them discount and this discount should include the cost of waste separation.

Those that failed to do the same should pay a premium. This premium would include the cost of separating the trash and some sort of penalty.

I wonder though if a waste management service provider has the economies of scale and the technology to separate trash at least as good as that being done by the consumers. If it does, perhaps it makes sense to do the separation on the other side of the equation rather than on the consumer side.

Apart from the payment schedule and recycling, another issue is this:

Along with the bills, the interim agreements between concessionaires of solid waste management facilities, which were arranged under the national privatisation of solid waste management programme, would be turned into concession agreements.

However, once this was done, the concessionaires would be subjected to strict key performance index and have to meet standards set by the government. [Better solid waste services once bills passed. NST. June 13 2007]

I am surprised that these waste management service providers are operating without any proper contract!

The introduction of contractual relationships would indeed improve the situation for all of us because with contracts, the service rendered by these management firms could be used to assure fund providers of repayment for any borrowing made by the firms to strengthen their business.

Categories
Economics Environment Politics & government

[1257] Of a sensible US proposal but a better German option

Anthropogenic climate change is a contentious issue in the international arena; it is a tragedy of the global commons. The latest high profile debate took place at the Germany-hosted G8 summit in the week of June 6 2007. The discussion stayed true to the current trend that no longer doubts the existence of human-induced climate change but rather, seeks to mitigate the effects of climate change. At the meeting, two road maps were presented: one by Germany and another by the United States with the former being supported by a clear majority. Within this context, I fall within the majority but that does not necessarily mean I reject the US version outright.

The German proposal calls for the halving of the 1990 global carbon dioxide level by 2050. Such suggestion would limit temperature increase to between 1.5 and 2.5 ÂșC. If it is adopted as the son of Kyoto, it would be binding just like Kyoto. As a note, the Kyoto Protocol demands a 5% cut of carbon dioxide as well as five other greenhouse gases from the 1990 level by 2012.

The US has refused to that proposal and has come up with an alternative of its own. Instead of reducing the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, it seeks to concentrate on reducing carbon intensity. Carbon intensity is simply a fancy word describing the ratio of carbon emissions to gross domestic product (GDP): the lower the figure, the more efficient the economy operates in term of carbon emissions.

While politically angry at the US, I am sympathetic to the US suggestion after giving it a fair inspection.

It is typical to blame countries with the larger total annual emissions of contributing to climate change. Applying the total annual national emissions as a basis of comparison is dependent on the size of the country, population and geography-wise. The larger a country is, the higher the emissions would be with all else equal. For instance, Malaysia contributed 0.6% of global emissions in 2002. If ASEAN is to be taken as a state, it, inclusive of Malaysia, would produce approximately 3.7% of global carbon emissions in 2002. That would rival a smaller Germany which contributed 3.3% of global emissions in the same year; Germany according to Wikipedia, based on figures produced by the United Nations Statistics Division, was the sixth largest emitter of carbon dioxide in 2002. Such comparison does not control for population or economy size. Without such control, the data is noisy and produces misleading conception.

In other words, using annual national carbon emissions for comparison purpose is almost meaningless and unfairly put too much blame related to climate change on the shoulders of large countries. What would be better for comparison purpose is the carbon intensity measurement as proposed by the US. Or, perhaps, my favorite, emissions per capita.

Take a look at annual national emissions in 2002:

GFDL. Wikipedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Ratio_of_GDP_to_carbon_dioxide_emissions.PNG

Then, observe carbon intensity in 2005 (in this graph, the red is below world’s average and green is above; the dimension is GDP/emissions. The inversed dimension means higher figure equals to higher efficiency):

GFDL. Wikipedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Countries_by_carbon_dioxide_emissions_world_map_deobfuscated.png

For emission per capita in 2003:

GFDL. Wikipedia. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Countries_by_carbon_dioxide_emissions_world_map_deobfuscated.png

Despite me preferring carbon intensity used as comparison purpose to annual national emissions, why would I not lending my support to the US proposal?

The answer is this: we need to lower the level of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. In fact, not just carbon dioxide but other sensible greenhouse gases. Lower carbon intensity alone does not do that job. Indeed, effort to lower carbon intensity does not mean lower global carbon level. During a period of economic boom and technological progress, efficiency as well as the carbon level could increase. Depending on the rate and volume, it would lead to increase in carbon level in the atmosphere.

How is that possible?

Efficiency is essentially a multiplier and it basically could reflect emissions reduction know-how. Greater technological level could permit greater efficient; lower rate. Then we have volume which could be interpreted as economic activities. Finally, of course, there is some rate of carbon absorption by nature. The diagram below illustrates the flow versus level model which is typical in economics:

By Mohd Hafiz Noor Shams. Some rights reserved.

The product of efficiency and volume, subtracted with the amount of absorption could be positive. To make it clearer, assuming increased efficiency leads to lower emissions, ceteris paribus, a sufficient increase in volume could erase any reduction made possible through higher emissions if volume is held constant.

The US proposal does not address that but the German proposal does. Hence, my support. Despite that, the German proposal should incorporate the other suggestion without losing sight of the level reduction goal.

Categories
Economics Environment Politics & government

[1254] Of G8 on climate change