DocMartin

There's a fairly long but easy coastal walk between Tai O and Tung Chung on Lantau, Hong Kong: the Tung O Ancient Trail.

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  • in reply to: Shark fin soup in Hong Kong updates #7770

    Very good to see in today’s S China Morning Post that Hong Kong University will no longer serve shark’s fin soup at banquets. Bit of a surprise this happens only now tho, given anti-shark’s fin soup crusader Brian Darvell is a professor in the HKU dental school.

    Sad to see in SCMP that there’s obfuscation from former greenie (well, I’d thought so; she seems less and less green since becoming Secretary for Environment, Transport and Works [yes, all these thrown together]) Sarah Liao:

    Quote:
    We support conservation…
    We have no plans to remove shark’s fin from [Hong Kong Government] menus yet…

    and now, drum roll please, the real gibberish:

    Quote:
    We still think that in this part of the world we still haven’t coome to any consensus as to whether we should accept a ban on the consumption of shark’s fin.

    So, Sarah, you mean you – the HK Govt – don’t really support conservation after all.

    Ah, conservation – so easy to “support”; so hard to do.

    in reply to: Meeting w Selina Chow re Lantau #7824

    just sent this follow-up email to Ms Chow; can but try, eh?!

    Quote:
    Dear Ms Chow:

    Thank you for meeting Lantau residents, and me, regarding the future of Tung Chung, Lantau – and even Hong Kong tourism (!)

    As I hope you will have seen from the Sustainable Development Plan for Lantau, it is not correct to say “greenies” are against economic progress.
    Instead – speaking for me at least – opposed to Big Silly Concrete Projects, that maybe masquerade as “development” but can cost far more than they recoup (anyone willing to show us figures for Cyberport?)

    The Plan – much as the plan from Loy Ho of the Lantau Post – places great emphasis on tourism on Lantau, making use of existing attractions, many of which are little known.
    Would you be interested in visiting some of these places, maybe on a quick tour? If so, please let me know; it should be possible to arrange something.
    Best regards,
    Martin

    in reply to: Hong Kong suffers Chronic Air Pollution #7653

    Bizarre; just checked at: http://www.epd-asg.gov.hk/eindex.php – and still blank since around 7pm on Sunday. Hopefully just temporary glitch. There’s no note on EPD website. Sunday China Morning Post – sadly unlinkable – led with big story on air pollution yesterday, inc criticisms of govt for not measuring the smaller particulates, which recent research eslewhere has shown to be more dangerous than previously thought, especially impacted children. Showed how our air pollution would be consistently way over European Union Standards. Suggested breathing here is roughly equivalant to smoking eight cigarettes a day. Govt has anti-smoking adverts. Maybe soon should also have adverts saying, "Warning: Breathing Can Damage Your Health". Google News search for air pollution particulates yields items inc re air pollution linked to increased risk of heart attack and lower sperm quality; also news item titled Heat dangers forgotten in the battle against air pollution – saying some deaths thought to be due to ozone were really because of heat. People over 65 most at risks; and heat related deaths even in UK.

    in reply to: Meeting w Selina Chow re Lantau #7823

    Yeah, when there are some tv news crews around.

    I’d like a ringside seat, please. :P

    But, maybe we’ll find that some more dialogue helps explain to Selina C (and others) about these mysterious creatures called greenies, and even regular people. And how we want development – but sustainable type, not just big silly concrete projects that cost far more than they earn, while wrecking yet more of the planet.

    Martin

    in reply to: Hong Kong suffers Chronic Air Pollution #7651

    Hong Kong Wheezes as China’s Industrial Economy Belches Smog is title of an item from Bloomberg. Plenty of info and quotes, including:

    Quote:
    “It’s an absolute scandal,” said Anthony Hedley, chairman of the department of community medicine at the University of Hong Kong. “Hong Kong is going backward in terms of pollution. The government has been non-interventionist to the point of being really negligent.”
    Quote:
    On average Hong Kong experiences low visibility every five days, according to a CLSA report in April. Good air quality days fell to 35 percent last year compared with 45 percent in 2001, it said. Singapore is by far the cleanest city in Asia in terms of air quality, while Tokyo, Seoul, and Taipei all enjoy better air than Hong Kong, the report said.
    Quote:
    Falling air quality in Hong Kong will affect the health of the city’s residents long into the future, said Professor Tai Hing Lam, head of the department of community medicine at the University of Hong Kong. “If air pollution affects our people at a young age, then we may see something more disastrous in the coming years,” said Lam. “Pollution is becoming a major problem in Hong Kong.” The city’s attractiveness as a travel destination is also under threat, according to industry officials such as Mark Lettenbichler, chairman of the Hong Kong Hotels Association, and Selina Chow, chairman of the Hong Kong Tourism Board. “It should be the government’s number one priority,” Chow said.
    in reply to: First Ferry fare increases unnecessary? #7821

    in follow-up email from LIM:

    Quote:
    Some members found that it would get quicker response if you write to “1823 Citizen’s Easy Link” than to write directly to Transport department. It’s a “one-stop service to provide 24-hour access for members of the public to enquire or complain about the services of participating departments”. If you haven’t sent email to Transport Dep yet, send it to [email protected] .

    And could we also ask you to write to the Legco Panel on Transport, please?

    Chairman LAU Kong-wah
    Email address: [email protected]
    Fax:2530 3869
    Office address: Room 523A, West Wing, Central Government Offices, Hong Kong

    Deputy Chairman Albert CHAN Wai-yip
    Email address: [email protected]
    Fax:2417 9985
    Office address: 9A, G/F, Wing Hong Building, Fok Loi Estate,Tsuen Wan, New Territories

    in reply to: Eco-map (and yr video) #7820

    now, don’t you go thinking you’ll get a discount simply for having a dvd despoiled by my scribble :P

    I’ll email notice around hkoutdoors members once dvd’s ready (and it isn’t finished; jobs to do seem minor but will take time)

    Martin

    in reply to: Eco-map (and yr video) #7817

    Hi Richard:

    Quick count, and looks like we manaaged 14 sites (including Chinese white dolphins as a “site”) for the video.
    Hope you like the map as n when you collect one.

    Cheers,
    Martin

    in reply to: More extreme hurricanes due? #7764

    thanks, jimmi james – scary stuff; we’re all in some giant experiment, with far more unpleasantness to come

    This is global warming, says environmental chief:
    As Hurricane Rita threatens devastation, scientist blames climate change

    Quote:
    The growing violence of storms such as Katrina, which wrecked New Orleans, and Rita, now threatening Texas, is very probably caused by climate change, said Sir John Lawton, chairman of the Royal Commission on Environmental Pollution.

    Referring to the arrival of Hurricane Rita he said: “If this makes the climate loonies in the States realise we’ve got a problem, some good will come out of a truly awful situation.”

    Asked about characterising them as “loonies”, he said: “There are a group of people in various parts of the world … who simply don’t want to accept human activities can change climate and are changing the climate.”

    “I’d liken them to the people who denied that smoking causes lung cancer.”

    Yes, seems that in US govt there is/was perception that climate change is partly a political issue – and if it doesn’t fit your political outlook, it isn’t happening or isn’t important. (The Economist seems to adopt such a view, too.)

    in reply to: More extreme hurricanes due? #7762

    Just in from Dr Glen Barry, of EcoEarth:

    Quote:
    How Many Times Must a Hurricane Come Ashore, Before You Call it Global Warming?
    The Answer My Friend Is Blowing in Rita’s Wind, The Answer Depends Upon
    You and Me

    Earth Meanders by Dr. Glen Barry
    http://earthmeanders.blogspot.com/
    September 23, 2005

    How many monster hurricanes does it take before governments and
    individuals, as a matter of prudence, start taking precautions in response
    to climate change? This essay’s title is to be sung to the tune of Bob
    Dylan’s “Blowing in the Wind”. As was the case then, the issue of climate
    change is ripe for protest and social change. Anyone who spends time
    outdoors and is in touch with nature and ecology can tell the climate is
    changing dramatically.

    Humanity must embark now upon a 60% reduction in greenhouse gas emissions
    to be achieved by the year 2050. This is the best scientific estimate of
    emission reductions necessary to stabilize the Earth’s climatic system in
    a condition largely similar to the present, while avoiding the most
    egregious catastrophic impacts of abrupt climate change. Individuals must
    start changing their lifestyles and governments their policies in order to
    limit and adapt to increasingly evident climate change.

    As the second human intensified hurricane in a matter of weeks looms over
    America’s gulf coast, it is readily apparent that humanity is witnessing
    climate change of their own making. Melting glaciers and permafrost,
    rising seas, deadly heatwaves and scorching droughts apparently were not
    enough. More fundamentally, these dual hurricanes and other
    demonstrations of climate change herald the beginning of a more systematic
    collapse of key regional and global ecosystems and their processes as the
    result of humans’ overbearing presence upon the Earth.

    Those that say these hurricanes are the result of natural variability
    point to no scientific studies. All they have to offer is their opinion,
    clouded by an inability to accept that humans are capable of transforming
    the Earth. On the other hand, there are decades of studies, modeling and
    science that predicted stronger hurricanes as a result of global warming.
    Frankly, when media ask whether the hurricanes have anything to do with
    climate change, I would like more than a shrug and some platitude like “we
    are not sure”. Media needs to delve more into what we do know, while
    indicating where we need to learn more, thus informing the search for
    answers.

    Recently the journal Science published research showing that the number of
    Category 4 and 5 hurricanes worldwide has nearly doubled over the past 35
    years as global sea surface temperatures increased. Earlier a paper in
    Nature revealed that major storms in the Atlantic and Pacific since the
    1970s have increased in intensity by about 50 percent. The phenomenon of
    warming oceans is well studied, and it is known that in the past 50 years
    oceans have on average warmed by one degree Fahrenheit (about 0.5 degrees
    Celsius). Indeed, a major study published mid-year in Science by a group
    of Scripps Institution of Oceanography scientists found clear evidence of
    human-produced warming in the world’s oceans.

    The U.S. with four percent of the world’s population is responsible for a
    quarter of the world’s carbon dioxide emissions, and Americans are
    laggards in supporting policies to address climate change. As American
    citizens are battered by these hurricanes, America has a special
    responsibility to determine whether and to what degree these nearly
    concurrent catastrophes are human caused. The logical place to start is
    investigating further why and how gulf waters are warming.

    Katrina and Rita’s demonstration of the deadly potential of human
    intensified hurricanes needs an urgent response. Their ferocity would
    ideally lead to the American government facing up to the threat of climate
    change, and acting with strong resolve in response. Whether you accept
    the preponderance of climate change evidence or not, the prudent and
    responsible thing would be to launch a major scientific investigation
    while starting to prepare. What will happen when oceans warm by three or
    five degrees Fahrenheit (1.7 – 2.8 degrees Celsius), which is forecasted
    by the end of the century? There is no strength in smug, ill-informed
    self-assurance.

    And what if it is proven that human caused climate change has contributed
    to these disasters? What then? Will it be life as usual? Or do
    Americans in particular have the will to transform themselves? I have
    often wondered whether Americans have the strength to fundamentally change
    their way of being when they see they must. Somewhat similarly, we have
    witnessed Russians adapting to the collapse of empire, and Germany and
    Japan rebuilding after disastrous militarism. Can America peacefully
    transition to a post-petroleum lifestyle starting now? We shall soon
    see.

    The primary obstacle remains how to assist people to acknowledge deadly
    global warming is happening and begin adjusting their lifestyles
    accordingly. Further, a political space must be established that gives
    politicians incentives to advocate and implement sufficient responses.
    Environmental warnings at this point are more than “I told you so”. They
    highlight that the impacts of climate change have moved to a new level,
    and are still worsening in ways that hurt us all – environmentalists and
    non-environmentalists alike.

    The necessary changes are significant but not insurmountable. All Earth’s
    citizens must develop a conservation ethic: less consumption, more living;
    fewer things, greater meaning; more experiences, less material hassles.
    The age of boundless consumption is over – we must drive, eat, house
    ourselves and otherwise live more simply and in harmony with the Earth.
    It is difficult to hear truth that goes against your established way of
    living. But your survival depends upon acting on the Earth’s global warning
    system as evident by Rita and Katrina.

    Governments are failing their citizens. Leadership in a time of climate
    crisis in particular means facing your biases – sifting and winnowing the
    evidence to find the truth. Leadership is more than having an opinion.
    It requires adapting to new scientific knowledge, doing what must be done
    for the people and the Earth, even if it clashes with your rigid
    worldview. It is essential that government aggressively and immediately
    increase support for emission reductions, energy conservation and
    renewable energy development, as a matter of utmost urgency.

    Even as we do everything possible to stabilize climate change at levels
    where the Earth remains livable, it is time to start preparing for climate
    change impacts. And we must do so without shifting toward authoritarian
    government. In addition to obvious needs such as increasing financial
    support for civilian emergency response services, this will require major
    investments in restoration of natural ecosystems, relocating populations
    from harms way, and restructuring the economy to sustainable use of
    natural capital.

    Bottom line: according to the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change,
    emissions of carbon dioxide and other greenhouse gases will raise global
    average temperatures by up to 5.8 degrees Celsius (10.4 degrees
    Fahrenheit) by the end of the century. This will affect not only weather
    patterns but also water resources, ecosystems and agriculture. As an
    individual, you can develop and trust your own ecological intuition while
    being informed by thousands of leading scientists, or your can succumb to
    the vitriol of conservative pundits and a handful of oil industry funded
    skeptics. Just be prepared to live – if conditions allow – with your
    choice.

    in reply to: More extreme hurricanes due? #7761

    Bush has argued that US shouldn’t do much about global warming, as would put US jobs at risk.
    I’ve long believed this was false, short term thinking; that storms etc from warming would cause plenty of trouble for US economy and jobs.
    Just seen news report includes:

    Quote:
    More than 200,000 people have lost their jobs because of Hurricane Katrina

    Yes, Katrina not certainly a partial product of warming (those [unusually] warm/hot Gulf waters leading to rapid strengthening) – but short of thing to be expected as result of global warming. Other impacts not always so headlines grabbing, but also serious and unpleasant.
    And now, Rita causing massive trouble – inc for oil industry, which is perhaps appropriate. Oh for a tornado from Rita swirling into Bush’s summer home.

    in reply to: Accomodation for “round the world travellers” #7815

    Hi JB:

    I live on Cheung Chau, so can perhaps help w contacts for flats.
    Some time ago, I did small website for a holiday flat owner here (dunno about prices now; think the email may no longer work but not sure):
    http://hkseaview.tripod.com/

    Fung Wong Holiday Bungalows on Lantau a good place, but in Tong Fuk, so fairly remote; some info if you search this forum.

    Hope this may be of some use.

    Martin

    in reply to: More extreme hurricanes due? #7760

    commentary by former Cllinton adviser raps Bush administration for cutting New Orleans flood control budget by 44%; also for inaction re global warming.

    "No One Can Say they Didn’t See it Coming"

    in reply to: More extreme hurricanes due? #7759

    Following the above study, comes Katrina – and E Magazine has a commentary, Stormy Weather: Can We Link it to Global Warming?.

    For some time now, those opposed to doing much about global warming (Bush administration, say) have argued it would cost too much, such as in US jobs.
    How does the potential balance sheet look now? (Katrina may or may not have been a child of global warming – but is the sort of weather phenomenon that’s forecast as temperatures rise, more energy circulates through the atmosphere.)

    in reply to: Offshore Fishing #7530

    Hi Gonefishing:

    Hope the forum goes well; look forward to seeing link to hkoutdoors on it.

    Martin

Viewing 15 posts - 271 through 285 (of 375 total)