Friday, 29 April 2011

Facts You Didn't Know About Water

8 Facts You Didn't Know About Water

 

  1.  Every week, 42,000 people die from unsafe drinking water and unhygienic living conditions.
  2. Students in developing countries lose 443 million school days each year due to diseases associated with the lack of water, sanitation and hygiene. Repeated episodes of diarrhea and worm infestations diminish a child's ability to learn and impair cognitive development.
  3. More people have access to cell phones than to toilets. As a result, tons of untreated human waste make their way to water sources causing a litany of diseases, and even death.
  4. The US, Mexico and China lead the world in bottled water consumption, with people in the US drinking an average of 200 bottles of water per person each year. Over 17 million barrels of oil are needed to manufacture those water bottles, 86 percent of which will never be recycled.
These facts are disheartening, but they don't have to be the norm. Even in the darkest depths of the water crisis, we found positive solutions that are already being put in place.
  1. Organizations like Water.org and charity: water are leading the charge in bringing fresh water to communities in the developing world by not only building wells in remote villages but also creating sustainable infrastructure to maintain those wells.
  2. The average person uses 465 liters of water per day. But by educating yourself about where you are most wasteful in your water use, you can begin to reduce that waste.
  3. There are small steps we can all take to help keep pollution out of our rivers and streams, like correctly disposing of household wastes.
  4. Communities around the world are saying no to bottled water. Doing so not only drastically reduces water bottle waste, but also saves taxpayers a pretty penny. For example, the city of San Francisco saved $500,000 per year by terminating all of its bottled water contracts.

Wednesday, 27 April 2011

Environmental concern !!!

Students learn about the environment



BACK for the second year, Telekom Malaysia Berhad’s (TM) Earth Camp started in March and will be wrapping up in July in several locations in Malaysia.
In collaboration with the Malaysian Nature Society (MNS), the programme is a three-day, two-night event for students who are members of Kelab Pencinta Alam at their respective schools.
There are six camps planned and organised according to zones — Northern, Southern, Central, Eastern, Sabah and Sarawak.
Knee-deep effort: Participants of the East Coast edition planting a few of the 200 mangrove trees along the Kampung Mangkuk shoreline.
 
Participants will be taken out for adventures in jungles, where they can get first-hand experience with nature, generating excitement and appreciation for the environment while understanding various environmental issues and concerns.
The theme this year is based on the four elements of nature — Earth, Water, Air and Fire — with the human element.
The first camp was organised at Nur Laman Bestari, Ulu Yam for the Central zone from March 25 to 27.
Categorised under the element of ‘Earth’, the camp was attended by 106 students and 27 teachers from 50 schools around Kuala Lumpur, Putrajaya and Selangor, including six students and two teachers from one of TM adopted schools, SM Rendah Agama Repah, Negri Sembilan.
One for the album: Some of the participants of the East Coast edition gathered for a group photo.
  
 
The camp saw many action-oriented activities, where participants were led through a 3km interpretative jungle trekking trail, animal observation study as well as water river condition analysis exercise.
The participants were also able to embrace the Earth Hour campaign on March 26.
TM also brought the participants to an orang asli settlement in Kampung Ulu Batu, Ulu Yam.
At the settlement, the participants planted 50 fruit plants and distributed 250 kg of rice and TM souvenirs to the orang asli families.
The families also shared insights on environmental related activities around the areas with the participants
The East Coast edition of the camp, held at Peladang Setiu Agro Resort, Terengganu, from April 1 to 3, saw 98 students including 11 children of TM employees and 15 teachers from 33 schools in Terengganu, Kelantan and Pahang exploring caves — Gua Batu Tersusun, Gua Batu Bongkok and Gua Kura-Kura.
‘Air’ was the theme of the camp, and fittingly, a climate change talk was organised to educate the participants on the causes, influences of climate change and what the participants could do to improve the current situation.
A record of sorts were made in Terengganu when the participants joined hands with the members of Persatuan Wanita Kampung Mangkok, Setiu to plant 200 mangrove trees along the Kampung Mangkuk shoreline.
The participants also managed to collect 369 kg of rubbish.
The remaining camps will be organised in the coming months.

http://thestar.com.my/metro/story.asp?file=/2011/4/28/central/8541370&sec=central

Monday, 25 April 2011

Earth Day 22, 2011 commemoration and tree planting

We had a great day planting trees with staffs of STK Electronics (M) Sdn Bhd on Friday, 22 April 2011.  In commemorate with Earth Day International.  Mr. Selvam , Mr. Selbam Mr Karu and others staffs contributed  and bought  a species of Tecoma sapling.

This Tecoma has beautiful flowers . The colours of pink and white petals magically carpet the roads. Tecoma trees with the yellow flowers (Tecoma sans, Sornapatti in Tamil) have been linked with treating diabetes and digestive ailments. So there you go, Beauty with Medicinal Powers.

There are some certain medicinal properties and usages of Tecoma stans. The root of the plant is reported to be a powerful diuretic, vermifuge and tonic. A grinding of the root and lemon juice is reportedly used as an external application and also taken internally in small quantities as a remedy for snake and rat bites. The grinding is taken as a remedy for scorpion sting, as well.


Anyway . It was a rainy day, but our spirits were high.  A rainy day is the best day to plant a tree.

A huge thank you to everyone who made it a really special day.

Crew members : Mrs. Sarala, Mrs. Nani, Ms. Ida, Mr. Selvam, Mr. Karu, Mr. Selvam , Mr. Vasu , Mr. William and of course me too one of them involved .....

You are invited to join our next Tree Planting in June 2011........................













































Friday, 22 April 2011

Open burning !! - call the Department of Environment


The public knows for a fact that open burning occurs everyday and I am positive that one Malaysian would know at least one family that practices open burning on nearly a daily basis  in the Taman they leave.

They either wouldn't rat on their neighbours or just couldn't be bothered to report the offense to the Department of Environment.
 
So, i encourage residents take immediate action to stop or call the department concern.

Any complaints pertaining to the open burning or any environmental pollution can be made via mail, phone-call or submitted directly to the relevant Department of Environment State Office's. DOE's HQ Control Room in Putrajaya operates 24 hours.

They have patrolling teams around Klang Valley who act immediately upon receiving your call.


Complaints Line: 03-8889 1972
JAS LINE :1-800-88-2727

 Complaints can also be forwarded to:-

Department of Environment
Ministry of Natural Resources
and Environment
Level 1 - 4, Podium 2 & 3,

Wisma Sumber Asli,
No.25, Persiaran Perdana,
Precint 4,
Federal Government Administrative Centre
62574 Putrajaya

Hunting Line : 03-8871 2000 / 8871 2200
Fax: 03-8889 1973/75


1. Director General Office

Fax : 03-8889 1036

2. Deputy Director General (Operational) Office

Fax : 03-8889 4020

3. Deputy Director General (Development) Office
Fax : 03-8889 1039


If you have any other solutions , please advise....

Thursday, 21 April 2011

Be part of the solution ! Earth Day 2011




Take Action

Earth Day is on April 22, 2011. It's a great time to learn about our planet and how to take care of it!


Get your friends to join Action !
                                                                                     

Encourage local businesses to  Plant

            

Tree of Copenhagen


 Involve your community leaders 

Friday, 15 April 2011

Magnitude 5.8 - EASTERN HONSHU, JAPAN.. Saturday, April 16, 2011 at 11:19:24 AM

Earthquake Details

 

  • This event has been reviewed by a seismologist.
Magnitude5.8
Date-Time
Location36.411°N, 139.649°E
Depth20.1 km (12.5 miles)
RegionEASTERN HONSHU, JAPAN
Distances26 km (16 miles) SW of Utsunomiya, Honshu, Japan
52 km (32 miles) E of Maebashi, Honshu, Japan
74 km (45 miles) W of Mito, Honshu, Japan
81 km (50 miles) N of TOKYO, Japan
Location Uncertaintyhorizontal +/- 14.9 km (9.3 miles); depth +/- 5.7 km (3.5 miles)
ParametersNST=493, Nph=498, Dmin=692.4 km, Rmss=0.67 sec, Gp= 29°,
M-type=regional moment magnitude (Mw), Version=B
Source
  • USGS NEIC (WDCS-D)
Event IDusc0002srs  

Wednesday, 13 April 2011

One day, Yellowstone’s restless giant will reawaken

The underground volcanic plume at Yellowstone in the US may be bigger than previously thought, according to a new study by geologists.


Think of Yellowstone, and most people think of geysers. And while over three million people go to Yellowstone National Park each year to see the park’s geysers, hot springs, steam vents, and mudpots, many don’t know that the heat fueling these wonders is coming from a volcano, possibly the largest on Earth.
A volcano that lies directly beneath their feet.

The Yellowstone supervolcano, hot enough to fuel 10,000 hot water features that have been spewing, hissing and surging for hundreds and thousands of years.
A volcano whose restless shifting triggers thousands of small earthquakes in the park each year.
A volcano that has had eruptions thousands of times more powerful than Mount St. Helens.
A volcano that could - in an instant- change our world forever.
The Yellowstone volcano is one of our planet’s restless giants. For scientists, the question is not one of whether it will erupt again, but when.

But the Yellowstone "supervolcano" has erupted violently in the distant past and could do so again at some point. The new study is set to be published in Geophysical Research Letters journal.

In 2009, researchers used seismic waves from earthquakes to build up an image of the hotspot beneath Yellowstone, which straddles the US states of Wyoming, Montana and Idaho.
The authors of the latest work used variations in the electrical conductivity of rocks to produce a new picture of the plume.

This conductivity is a property of the molten silicate rocks and the hot briny water that is naturally present in them."It's like comparing ultrasound and MRI in the human body; they are different imaging technologies," says co-author Michael Zhdanov, a professor of geophysics at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City.
Hot envelope The 2009 images, using seismic waves, showed the plume of hot and molten rock dipping downward from Yellowstone at an angle of 60 degrees. This plume extended 240km (150mi) west-northwest to a point at least 660km (410mi) under the Montana-Idaho border.
This was as far as the seismic imaging could "see".
The new study, using electrical conductivity, can only see about 320km (200mi) below ground.
  
Variations in electrical conductivity reveal the volcanic plume of partly molten rock
But it shows the conductive part of the plume dipping more gently, at an angle of perhaps 40 degrees to the west, and extending perhaps 640 km (400 miles) from east to west.
They may look different because the two techniques image slightly different things.
Seismic images highlight materials such as molten or partly molten rock that slow seismic waves, while the geoelectric technique displays briny fluids that conduct electricity.
Co-author Robert B Smith, who is also at University of Utah, said the plume was bigger in the geoelectric picture. He said it could be inferred that there were more fluids than shown by the seismic images.
Despite differences, he says, "this body that conducts electricity is in about the same location with similar geometry as the seismically imaged Yellowstone plume."


          Variations in electrical conductivity reveal the volcanic plume of partly molten rock

The more gentle tilt of the geoelectric plume could suggest that the hot region imaged by the seismic wave technique may be enveloped by a broader, underground envelope of partly molten rock and liquids, the researchers say.
There have been three huge eruptions of the Yellowstone supervolcano: 2.1 million years ago, 1.3 million years ago and 640,000 years ago. Two of these eruptions blanketed a large area of North America with volcanic ash.
The most recent full-scale eruption of the Yellowstone supervolcano ejected some 1,000 cubic km (240 cubic miles) of hot ash and rock into the atmosphere. There have been smaller eruptions in between the largest outpourings; the most recent of these occurred 70,000 years ago.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-13061779

Saturday, 9 April 2011

NEEM - Tree of the 21st Century

IRIM News

 
NEEM - Tree of the 21st Century
Mr. Segar Krishnan President of 'Future in Our Hands Society' should be commended for contributing a Neem (Azadirachta indica) sapling which was planted in a football field in Klang.  The late Professor E.C Mobbs, a one-time head of forestry at the University of Wales used many words of praise when talking about the Neem tree.
The Neem tree is often referred to as a 'miracle tree' particularly because of its rich medicinal value.  It is well known in South Asia because it is a remedy for countless health problems.  Some people described it as the "most helpful plant on earth" or "virtual living pharmacy", and the United Nations has called it the tree of the 21st Century.














How about switching from Sentang to Neem? 
 

Floods Reduces by Pruning of 67,000 Trees in the City
City Hall has trimmed 67,000 trees along the main roads and housing estates in the city in 2001 in support of flood relief.  Its Organisation Management Department (public affairs division) Deputy Director Sarifuddin Ibrahim said they have also cut down 2,500 "dangerous" trees.
"Tree trimming is done on a routine and urgent basis following public complaints and regardless of the weather conditions," he said.
City Hall will continue with work on pruning trees which can be dangerous during stormy weather, and to clean up clogged drains in response to complaints from the public.  
Trees causing floods?  This is something new! Other factors for sure are much bigger contributors to clogging of drains than dead leaves.
 

 

The Eden Project
The Eden Project is the worlds largest green house. A vast number of tropical species from around the world are being planted in a clay pit in Cornwall, England.  A good film on this project has appeared in the National Geographic Channel (Channel 52, ASTRO).
It will have computerized climate control system.  It will include art, displays, theatre, information and fun.  It will be declared open some time this year (2002).  It is becoming one of the largest Botanical Gardens in the world.  Should Malaysia set up a similar project with plants from temperate countries incorporated therein?

You can view this article  at :   http://www.forestry.gov.my/IRIM/berita0702.htm

Friday, 8 April 2011

Climate Change conference in Bangkok - need strong agreements







On the final day of the UN Climate Change Conference in Bangkok (3-8 April), UNFCCC Executive Secretary Christiana Figueres said that while positive and constructive, the meeting in Thailand had also highlighted continuing divisions between governments that needed to be resolved in the course of the year in order to come to a strong outcome in Durban in December. 

A central issue governments discussed in Bangkok was the future of the Kyoto Protocol, which includes the only current international set of accounting rules to protect environmental integrity. The first commitment period of the Kyoto Protocol expires in 2012.
"Discussions in Bangkok under the Kyoto Protocol importantly shifted from a focus on what should happened with regard to the future of the protocol to how it will happen," Ms. Figueres said. "It is significant that there is a strong desire to build on the Kyoto rules and a desire to find a political solution in 2011.
 
Picking up on the climate change agreements reached in Cancun at the end of last year, governments began organising their work of 2011 in Bangkok. Ms. Figueres said that most developed countries had focussed on the implementation of the Cancun Agreements, whilst developing countries put a stronger emphasis on resolving issues not agreed in Cancun, including the future of the Kyoto Protocol. 

"Governments are conscious a middle ground is needed to reassure all sides, and that means capturing unfinished tasks resulting from the action plan agreed in Bali in 2007, as well as clarity on tasks agreed in Cancun," Ms. Figueres said. "Governments now need to use the common understandings reached in Bangkok to initiate work at the next session and from now on, time must be used wisely," she added.

In order to achieve clarity on the emission reduction pledges of countries, an important workshop took place in Bangkok on industrialised country emission reduction targets and the conditions for meeting them. Another workshop was held on developing country mitigation actions, looking at what these actions mean and what level of support they might need. 

 An expert workshop on the Technology Mechanism agreed in Cancun also took place in Thailand, looking into practical issues such as what the network should look like, who should be included in it, and how effective participation of relevant institutions be ensured.*
Ms. Figueres pointed that meeting the long-term challenge of climate change required increasingly strong international agreements, backed by national policies that incentivise all sides to take aggressive and collective action on a global scale. 

"The UNFCCC is the place where governments have committed to act together on climate change," she said. "At home, under their different political systems, they need to create the right policies to do so. This is not an 'either/or' choice, it has to be a package. No country can hope to go it alone," she emphasized.
The UN Climate Change Conference in Bangkok has been attended by around two thousand participants from 175 countries, including government delegates, representatives from business and industry, environmental organisations and research institutions. It is conceptually the first part of a three-week session, which will resume in Bonn, Germany, on 6 June 2011.

Wednesday, 6 April 2011

6 ingredient- Green Home Cleaning

6 ingredient- Green Home Cleaning Tips


Sure, it’s great to find that one magical product that solves avery specific household problem . But the truth is, you need little more than the following six ingredients—baking soda, borax, lemon juice, salt, olive oil and white vinegar—to clean just about anything in your home ( pet hair excluded). Here are just a few of the many uses for these, well, magical multi-taskers:

1. Baking soda: Acts as a scrub to remove hard water stains; polishes metal; deodorizes pretty much anything it touches (try stashing some in the fridge).

2. Borax: Mixed with three parts water, it makes a paste for cleaning carpet stains; mixed with ¼ part lemon juice, it cleans stainless steel and porcelain. (Note: although borax is a natural substance, you still shouldn’t eat it—and neither should your kids or pets.)

3. Lemon: Deodorizes and cuts grease on counter tops; rubbed on cutting boards, it bleaches stains and disinfects; combined with baking soda, it removes stains from plastic food storage containers.

4. Salt: Another natural scrubber—sprinkle it on cookware or oven surfaces, then rub; add citrus juice to turn it into an effective rust remover.

5. White vinegar: Deodorizes and disinfects; combine with water(and a little liquid soap—I know, it feels like cheating) to clean windows,mirrors , and floors; use at full strength in a spray bottle to fight mold and mildew.

6. Olive Oil: Mix two parts oil with one part lemon juice and use as a natural wood polish. (Save the really good stuff for dinner.)

One added bonus of using natural cleaners: as part of your spring cleaning regimen , you can now clear out all those bottles of specialized (and possibly toxic) potions.

For more tips on rounding out your eco-friendly cleaning closet, search in google cleaning-pantry-checklist

What are your best natural cleaning techniques?