Eco-Voice Digest
In This Issue
Sustainable Development Dialogues
Will Rio+20 Deliver
Marshall Matters
Florida Planning Confernce
Lee's 20/20 conservation program
EvCo Conference 1/10/13
Endangered Species Report
Sea Grass and Carbon Sequestration
EPA rules on soot
Everglades Headwaters Proposal
PILT - payments in lieu of taxes
Everglades Task Force
Monday, June 18th, 2012  #1340
 
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Sustainable Development Dialogues
 
Rio de Janeiro

 

The Government of Brazil is organizing, with the support of the United Nations, the Sustainable Development Dialogues, to be held in Riocentro  in the context of the United Nations Conference on Sustainable Development -Rio+20.
In the four days prior to the High Level Segment, representatives from civil society, including private sector, NGOs, scientific community, among other major groups, will convene at the same venue of the Rio+20 Conference. They are expected to engage in an open and action-oriented debate on key topics related to sustainable development. There will be no participation of Governments or UN agencies. Three recommendations emanating from each of the Dialogues will be conveyed directly to the Heads of State and Government present at the Summit.

Ten topics will be debated, based on their relevance to the furthering of sustainable development. At the bottom of this page you can see the list of themes, the schedule and the confirmed panelists. The debates will be broadcast live through the UN website.

With the support of the United Nations Development Program (UNDP), the Dialogues initiative was launched through a digital platform (https://www.riodialogues.org/

) in order to provide the wider public a democratic space for discussion. The on-line debates on each of the ten themes of the Dialogues, facilitated by researchers from renowned academic institutions around the world, resulted in ten concrete recommendations that can be viewed and voted for in a public website (http://vote.riodialogues.org).

The ten Recommendation in each theme, ranked by the support received inside the platform and by the votes received in the public site will be organized by the Facilitators and presented to the Panelists in the Sustainable Development Dialogues (Rio de Janeiro, 16-19 June 2012), during Rio+20.

This innovative bridge between civil society and Heads of State and Government is expected to contribute to the incorporation and engagement of stakeholders, based on the understanding that public participation is essential for the consolidation of sustainable development as the paradigm for action in both the public and the private sectors.

 
June 18
11h00 to 13h30: Sustainable energy for all
15h30 to 18h00: Water
19h30 to 22h00: Sustainable cities and innovation

June 19
11h00 to 13h30: Oceans
 

 

 http://webtv.un.org/

 

Southland rising
Southland Rising
Mark Renz photo art

 

 

 

Will Rio+20 Deliver on Fast-Tracking to a Greener Economy?

 

World Resources Institute

 


 

Scaling-up current examples of the green economy in action-particularly in developing countries-has the potential to deliver a 'triple bottom line' of job-creating economic growth, environmental sustainability and social inclusion...

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

  

 

 

Quiet place
We all have our quiet place
Mark Renz photo

 

Florida Planning and Zoning Association
2012 Conference
June 20-23 -- Downtown Orlando


This year's annual FPZA conference, "Connecting the Dots," will address planning techniques and principles necessary to effectively link our communities together. Participants will hear from experts in the fields of multi-modal transportation, sustainability, mixed uses, and private / public partnerships, which collectively create better places and improve the quality of life for residents and visitors of Florida.

For more information, please visit http://www.1000fof.org/FPZA%20Conference%202012%20Information.pdf

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

 

 

  Center for Biological Diversity :  groundbreaking report, 


 

  
 

 

P.S. You can download a PDF of the 16-page report here.



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 90 percent of the studied species are recovering right on time to meet recovery goals set by federal scientists.

Our study is a potent rebuke of recent critiques by right-wing politicians who deem the Act a failure. In fact, it's just the opposite. We found that, again and again, wildlife and plants from every corner of the country are being saved from extinction and placed squarely on the road to recovery by the Endangered Species Act.


Ultimately, the report should transform our national conversation about the strength and success of the Endangered Species Act, giving the Act solid protection from those who want to tear it down.

 
Read the report at www.ESAsuccess.org

 

 

Our momment
Tooth in Time
Partial mammoth tooth along the shoreline of a SW Florida marsh. 


Our Moment

This is our moment
here among the stones
that once breathed life
long before our kind

This is our moment
to flesh out the bones
and find the missing teeth
reflecting place and time

This is our moment
to stand where mammoths stood
to sense their presence
and know we'll join them soon

This is our moment
to wish we somehow could
hold life forever dear
and never enter the tomb


Mark Renz photo and poem

 

 

 

Dense seagrass meadows are a hallmark of the Florida Coastal Everglades  

 


 

 

Seagrasses Can Store as Much Carbon as Forests 

Researchers find that the global carbon pool in seagrass beds is as much as 19.9 billion metric tons

 

Seagrasses are a vital part of the solution to climate change and, per unit area, seagrass meadows can store up to twice as much carbon as the world's temperate and tropical forests.

 

So report researchers publishing a paper this week in the journal Nature Geoscience.

The paper, "Seagrass Ecosystems as a Globally Significant Carbon Stock," is the first global analysis of carbon stored in seagrasses.

The results demonstrate that coastal seagrass beds store up to 83,000 metric tons of carbon per square kilometer, mostly in the soils beneath them.

As a comparison, a typical terrestrial forest stores about 30,000 metric tons per square kilometer, most of which is in the form of wood.

The research also estimates that, although seagrass meadows occupy less than 0.2 percent of the world's oceans, they are responsible for more than 10 percent of all carbon buried annually in the sea.

"Seagrasses only take up a small percentage of global coastal area, but this assessment shows that they're a dynamic ecosystem for carbon transformation," said James Fourqurean, the lead author of the paper and a scientist at Florida International University and the National Science Foundation's (NSF) Florida Coastal Everglades Long-Term Ecological Research (LTER) site.

The Florida Coastal Everglades LTER site is one of 26 such NSF LTER sites around the world in ecosystems from forests to tundra, coral reefs to barrier islands.

"Seagrasses have the unique ability to continue to store carbon in their roots and soil in coastal seas," said Fourqurean. "We found places where seagrass beds have been storing carbon for thousands of years."

The research was led by Fourqurean in partnership with scientists at the Spanish High Council for Scientific Investigation, the Oceans Institute at the University of Western Australia, Bangor University in the United Kingdom, the University of Southern Denmark, the Hellenic Center for Marine Research in Greece, Aarhus University in Denmark and the University of Virginia.

Seagrass meadows, the researchers found, store ninety percent of their carbon in the soil--and continue to build on it for centuries.

In the Mediterranean, the geographic region with the greatest concentration of carbon found in the study, seagrass meadows store carbon in deposits many meters deep.

Seagrasses are among the world's most threatened ecosystems. Some 29 percent of all historic seagrass meadows have been destroyed, mainly due to dredging and degradation of water quality. At least 1.5 percent of Earth's seagrass meadows are lost every year.

The study estimates that emissions from destruction of seagrass meadows can potentially emit up to 25 percent as much carbon as those from terrestrial deforestation.

"One remarkable thing about seagrass meadows is that, if restored, they can effectively and rapidly sequester carbon and reestablish lost carbon sinks," said paper co-author Karen McGlathery, a scientist at the University of Virginia and NSF's Virginia Coast Reserve LTER site.

The Virginia Coast Reserve and Florida Coastal Everglades LTER sites are known for their extensive seagrass beds.

Seagrasses have long been recognized for their many ecosystem benefits: they filter sediment from the oceans; protect coastlines against floods and storms; and serve as habitats for fish and other marine life.

The new results, say the scientists, emphasize that conserving and restoring seagrass meadows may reduce greenhouse gas emissions and increase carbon stores--while delivering important "ecosystem services" to coastal communities.

The research is part of the Blue Carbon Initiative, a collaborative effort of Conservation International, the International Union for Conservation of Nature, and the Intergovernmental Oceanographic Commission of UNESCO.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

   




 

Just two weeks ago, the Environmental Protection Agency was dithering on a proposal to strengthen protections against an air pollutant that causes tens of thousands of avoidable deaths every year.

Enter Earthjustice attorney, Paul Cort, who on behalf of citizen groups asked a federal judge to order the EPA to get moving. So compelling was the case that the judge ruled in Earthjustice's favor directly from the bench, ordering the EPA to proceed without further delay. This motivated the EPA to settle the remainder of the suit and release a proposal. The agency also committed to release a final standard by Dec. 14, 2012.

Today, the agency released its proposal, and we have Cort's legal action to thank-a prime example of how citizen enforcement of our nation's environmental laws can produce real results for public health and the environment.

Here are the specifics: The EPA proposed tighter limits on soot pollution, a mixture of solid and liquid particles-each 30 times thinner than a strand of your hair-that can penetrate deep into the lungs, causing asthma and heart attacks and tens of thousands of avoidable deaths every year. Soot comes from coal-fired power plants, factories, diesel vehicles and other sources. Because so many of us are exposed to elevated levels of particle pollution, it's hard to find a deadlier air pollutant than soot.

Cort told the Washington Post that today's action is an opening offer. "There's no question that EPA's proposal is going to save lives," he said in an interview.

But despite this long overdue step in the right direction, Cort told me, "the EPA needs to set a stronger final standard to fully protect people from this deadly pollution."

The report Sick of Soot, released last year by Earthjustice, the American Lung Association and Clean Air Task Force, found that a truly strong soot standard could prevent nearly 36,000 premature deaths every year. We'll be pushing hard for such a standard when the public comment period opens up in a few weeks.

Please join us in the push for the strongest soot standards possible, and please share with your friends this important first step in what could be a major victory for public health and the environment.

(Earthjustice represented the American Lung Association and the National Parks Conservation Association in the legal proceedings that led to this proposal.)

 

 

 

   
  

 

 Everglades Headwaters Proposal- 150,000 acres!

 

"This initiative is aimed at preserving a rural working ranch landscape to protect and restore one of the great grassland and savanna landscapes of eastern North America. The partnerships being formed would protect and improve water quality north of Lake Okeechobee, restore wetlands, and connect existing conservation lands and important wildlife corridors to support the Everglades restoration effort."
- Interior Secretary Ken Salazar 

  

http://www.fws.gov/southeast/evergladesheadwaters/

 

 

 

 

 

 

Welcome to the Payments in Lieu of Taxes Website


 

 

"Payments in Lieu of Taxes" (or PILT) are Federal payments to local governments that help offset losses in property taxes due to nontaxable Federal lands within their boundaries. The key law that implements the payments is Public Law 94-565, dated October 20, 1976. This law was rewritten and amended by Public Law 97-258 on September 13, 1982 and codified at Chapter 69, Title 31 of the United States Code. The Law recognizes that the inability of local governments to collect property taxes on Federally-owned land can create a financial impact.

PILT payments help local governments carry out such vital services as firefighting and police protection, construction of public schools and roads, and search-and-rescue operations. The payments are made annually for tax-exempt Federal lands administered by the BLM, the National Park Service, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (all agencies of the Interior Department), the U.S. Forest service (part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture), and for Federal water projects and some military installations. PILT payments are one of the ways that the Federal government can fulfill its role of being a good neighbor to local communities.

The Department of the Interior's (DOI) Office of the Secretary has administrative authority over the PILT program. In addition to other responsibilities, DOI will calculate payments according to the formulas established by law and distribute the funds appropriated by Congress. Applicable DOI regulations pertaining to the PILT program were published as a final rule in the Federal Register on December 7, 2004.

The formula used to compute the payments is contained in the PILT Act and is based on population, receipt sharing payments, and the amount of Federal land within an affected county. PILT payments are in addition to other Federal revenues (such as oil and gas leasing, livestock grazing, and timber harvesting) that the Federal Government transfers to the States. The DOI has distributed more than $5.9 billion dollars in PILT payments (on average, $164.5 million annually) to each State (except Rhode Island) plus the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, and the Virgin Islands since these payments began in 1977.

See the news release announcing the 2012 PILT payments, as well as a breakdown of

PILT payments by State only or by State and County. 

 


 An  extension  of PILT was attached to a federal surface transportation bill in the Senate - but not in the House version, which could result in the counties losing funds.
Fine Southern Cuisine
Fine Southern Cuisine
Apple snail on the half shell

Male Everglades snail kite -- Mark Renz photo
 
  

Past reports and background information on Caloosahatchee conditions are available online at: http://www.sccf.org/content/201/Caloosahatchee-Condition-Reports.aspx
 

 

 

 


   

 

http://www.sfrestore.org/

 

The U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (USACE) and South Florida Water Management District (SFWMD) will be holding a Project Delivery Team (PDT) meeting for the Central Everglades Planning Project (CEPP) July 2nd and 3rd. 
 . PDT meetings enable federal, state and local agencies and tribal governments to provide their input into the Central Everglades Planning Project. Members of the public may attend the PDT meeting and provide public comment at the end of the meeting.

Additional information on CEPP is available at:
http://evergladesplan.org/pm/projects/proj_51_cepp.aspx
 

The agenda for the PDT meeting is coming soon and will be available at:
http://www.evergladesplan.org/pm/public_meetings/MeetingItem.aspx?meetingid=460

   
 
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