Canada to sign polar bear protection treaty
Von: abc (abc@123.cl) [Profil]
Datum: 30.10.2009 01:23
Message-ID: <20091030-002329.945.0@abc.shawnews.vc.shawcable.net>
Newsgroup: alt.animals.rights.promotion alt.animals.ethics.vegetarianuk.politics.animals rec.animals.wildlife
Datum: 30.10.2009 01:23
Message-ID: <20091030-002329.945.0@abc.shawnews.vc.shawcable.net>
Newsgroup: alt.animals.rights.promotion alt.animals.ethics.vegetarianuk.politics.animals rec.animals.wildlife
Canada to sign polar bear protection treaty October 29, 2009 (Picture) A mother polar bear and her cub share a tender moment. Canada will sign a new agreement on Friday with the governments of Greenland and Nunavut to protect polar bear populations in their overlapping regions. Photograph by: Yvette Cardozo, CNS OTTAWA — Canada will sign a new agreement on Friday with the governments of Greenland and Nunavut to protect polar-bear populations in their overlapping regions. Environment Minister Jim Prentice is travelling to Greenland for the day to participate in the signing ceremony, the government said in an advisory released Thursday. Conservation groups have said they expect the agreement to be similar to other bilateral deals, such as one signed last year between Canada and the U.S., as well as a separate agreement between Alaska and Russia. "That shared population (between Canada and Greenland) is probably the most endangered population of polar bears in the Arctic," said Craig Stewart, director of the Arctic program at WWF-Canada. "This agreement would provide the structure between the two countries to collaborate on stabilizing it." Previous bilateral agreements have set a framework for collaboration on scientific research and monitoring of population levels, and could also include specific provisions to address or restrict hunting. "This is sort of the missing piece of the jigsaw puzzle," said Stewart. A national panel of scientific experts has urged the federal government several times to list the polar bear as a species at risk, but instead, it set up a roundtable group to do further research. The U.S. government has already listed it as a "threatened species" and, last week, announced plans to designate nearly 500,000 square kilometres of territory in Alaska as critical habitat that would restrict economic development. Prentice said he would wait until a news conference in Greenland on Friday before commenting on the roundtable's recommendations and the status of polar bears. "It will be an important announcement and I'm looking forward to it," Prentice said in an interview. Some experts say specific populations of polar bears in some regions are at risk from human activity in the Arctic, as well as the effects of global warming and disappearing sea ice. Meantime, Prentice slammed a new report by two environmental groups, sponsored by the Toronto Dominion Bank, which suggested the government could meet its own climate goals through a plan that would slow the rate of growth in western provinces, while benefiting other regions. He said the report was "irresponsible" and "preposterous," because he believed its recommendations would threaten national unity, along with the government's revenues and capacity to deliver basic services. "I think it's built on assumptions that are not tenable and are economically destructive and potentially quite divisive in the country," Prentice said. "There is no other developed country at the table that is accepting the kinds of negative economic consequences that are put forward in this report."[ Auf dieses Posting antworten ]
