Visions of Green
After decades of rapid economic growth, Asia's environment is at a tipping point
Running Out of Breath
Overcrowded, shockingly polluted Kanpur symbolizes the enormity of India's environmental challenges
A New Day Dawns
Kitakyushu, once among the most polluted cities in Japan, has become an environmental role model
Awash in Trash
Asians are producing unprecedented quantities of rubbish. So where does it all end up?
China's Water Woes
Pollution, drought and deserts indicate China is struggling to manage its most basic resource

Rising to the Challenge
Five members of a new generation fighting to save the environment
Ken Noguchi, Japan
Mountain Man
Tisna Nando, Indonesia
All Is Not Lost
Vu Thi Quyen, Vietnam
First Mover
Wen Bo, China
Lonely Work
Tsering Dorje, Tibet
Help from Afar

India's Sick City
Polluted, overcrowed Kanpur is a dark reminder of the country's enormous environmental challenges
Living Dangerously
Rapid development and lax regulations have taken a heavy toll on Asia's environment
Parting the Waters
Two colossal projects aim to bring water to China's thirsty cities

Green Dreams
Remaking Seoul, South Korea
[05/15/2006]
Bad Air Days
Asia's Pollution Problems
[12/13/2004]
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SEEDS OF HOPE: Nando promotes rubber farming as a sustainable alternative to logging




Rising to the Challenge

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Posted Monday, October 2, 2006; 20:00 HKT

Tisna Nando, Indonesia

All Is Not Lost
The 2004 Asia tsunami destroyed villages, towns and lives. But in calamity there is sometimes opportunity—a wiping of the slate that, for better or worse, allows people to start over. In the aftermath of the disaster, Tisna Nando, a 35-year-old environmentalist from Indonesia's North Sulawesi province, saw that kind of clean-slate opportunity. As an education-and-awareness manager at Fauna & Flora International (FFI), a U.K.-based environmental NGO, Nando has worked for the past two years to help the people of devastated Aceh province create a better future for themselves by learning to live in greater harmony with their surroundings.

"It's difficult to talk about conservation when people are still trying to find a place to live," Nando says. "It was easier to speak about the environment when people were not so traumatized." After all, she and a handful of colleagues at FFI work in Calang, a district of Aceh where most of the homes and businesses were flattened by the tsunami, where half of all residents were killed, where survivors are still struggling to make enough money to put rice and fish on the table.

But Nando has slowly built trust among the locals. After the tsunami, the first order of business was damage control. So Nando started a program employing 300 people who cleaned up mangroves ripped out by the waves and replaced them with live plants in order to restore the shoreline's potential for shrimp and crab farming. An additional 25 hectares were planted along the coast to act as a natural barrier against future tsunamis. Now, with normalcy returning to the lives of the area's fisherman and farmers, Nando and her colleagues talk to residents one-on-one about the long-term benefits of preserving their environment.

Progress is often measured in small victories. For example, Nando says her group convinced a local official to refrain from opening a restaurant that featured dishes made from the area's wild birds. But they are also tackling greater challenges. Aceh's forests are the most ecologically diverse in Indonesia, but clearcutting has taken a heavy toll. FFI was able to convince the heads of six Acehnese villages that reckless logging was destroying their future.

In July, the village leaders signed an agreement banning the clearing of any more forests in their districts. Since then, "the water is much cleaner and not yellow like before," says Muhib Budin, a local leader. As part of the project, Budin received 12,000 rubber-tree saplings from FFI to plant as an income substitute for the village. Hashimi, an ex-logger who before the tsunami cut down more than 10 trees a month to satisfy demand for Aceh's precious seumantok wood, is also thinking long term. "If we replant the trees by the lake," he says, "maybe we could increase eco-tourism in Aceh." Those are hopeful words from an island where hope has been in short supply.

Vu Thi Quyen >>



Learning to Fly Green [Sep. 25, 2006]
Air travel can be an environmentally dirty business. A couple tips on making it cleaner

Dangerous Dive [Jul. 10, 2006]
The perils and politics of swimming in China's Pearl River

Still Losing a Harbor [Jun. 19, 2006]
Hong Kong has a rare opportunity to fix its unwelcoming waterfront. Think it will take it?

China's Toxic Shock [Nov. 27, 2005]
A huge chemical spill shuts down a city's water--and another clumsy official cover-up is exposed

The Middle Landfill [Nov. 17, 2003]
China's economy vs. its environment

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FROM THE OCTOBER 9, 2006 ISSUE OF TIME MAGAZINE; POSTED MONDAY, OCTOBER 2, 2006


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