Australia–New Zealand Climate Change and Business Conference

The 2nd Australia–New Zealand Climate Change and Business Conference will be held on 20-21 February 2006 in Adelaide, Australia, to explore business opportunities and risks associated with climate change.

This not-for-profit venture will build on the success of the inaugural conference and a call from delegates for this follow up meeting. It is being organised by a coalition of business groups, government agencies and NGOs from Australia, New Zealand, USA and Europe. It aims to engage mainstream Australian and New Zealand businesses on the climate change issue, exploring the business opportunities and risks and providing a forum for exchanging ideas, developing strategic networks and stimulating action.

The conference is timed to allow for review of developments since the Kyoto Protocol came into force and assess expectations for the first commitment period and beyond. Targeting CEOs, senior executives, policy-makers and consultants, the conference will examine New Zealand’s plans to be an active participant in the Kyoto markets and Australia’s alternative approach. Guest speakers will identify opportunities for trans-Tasman business liaisons and the significant developments in the Asia-Pacific region with respect to carbon projects (including CDM and emissions trading).

The conference will also explore:
* The latest science and the potential business impacts of climate change
* Drivers for taking action on climate change, including review of local and international government policies and indications of community support
* Perspectives and initiatives from local and global political and business leaders – what are they doing and why?
* Emerging technologies and innovative approaches to reducing emissions and adapting to climate change
* Business opportunities arising from local government initiatives
* Operating within the Kyoto protocol and outside the Kyoto Protocol
* Lessons from operating emissions trading markets (including the EU market)
* What will the future hold, with or without the Kyoto Protocol

Water Markets Worldwide Business Briefing Conference, 2005

The presentation will discuss how the biggest investment and fastest development in world water markets come from China and Southeast Asian Countries. Researchers and strategists for companies and ministries in water markets worldwide will give a business briefing. The primary audience includes companies, ministries, and media/press.

Mining for Sustainable Development:

The Chamber of Mines of South Africa is hosting the 2005 mining conference for sustainable development. The conference aims to take stock of developments over the past two years since the 2003 conference on implementing sustainable development in mining. The conference with look at the benefit to the wealth and well-being of employees, affected communities and society; and the benefit to the air, water and land. It will explore ways to extract more benefit through our actions – taking different actions or taking actions differently. Biodiversity will be topic of discussion.

Integrated Restoration of Riverine Wetlands, Streams, Riparian Areas, and Floodplains in Watershed Contexts

The workshop will help attendees to understand assessment approaches for streams, wetlands, floodplains, and riparian areas and how they might be cooperatively applied on a watershed basis; to develop integrated watershed plans and policies for wetlands and other related aquatic ecosystems; to apply "on-the-ground" integrated restoration policies including low-tech and low-cost approaches; build local, tribal, state, and federal restoration partnerships for watershed-based approaches.

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Biodiversity Offsets for Mining (workshop)

The International Council on Mining and Metals (ICMM) is running a workshop on Biodiversity Offsets for Mining in conjunction with The Chamber of Mines of South Africa's Mining for Sustainable Development conference in November 2005. The objective of the workshop is to obtain views from different stakeholders regarding the practical implementation of biodiversity offsets. Offsets offer companies a means of ensuring continued access to resources, securing licence to operate and (given the increasing interest from investors in offsets for risk management purposes) continued access to finance. For governments, biodiversity offsets may help to ensure that commitments such as those under the Millennium Development Goals and the Convention on Biological Diversity are met. For environmental groups offsets can potentially achieve greater conservation value for money. If designed appropriately, they may also confer livelihood and health benefits.

First Annual Diversitas Conference

www.diversitas-international.org

EMBARGO: 6 p.m. GMT, Tues. Oct. 25, 2005

Contact: Terry Collins +1-416-538-8712; +1-416-878-8712 (m), [email protected]

DIVERSITAS experts are available for advance interviews Mon-Tues. Oct. 24-25. Please call to schedule a time.
For conference information: www.diversitas-osc1.org or [email protected]

Valuing Biodiversity Services,
Including Its Insurance Against Disease,
Focus of 700 Experts Meeting in Mexico

By diluting the pool of virus targets and hosts, biodiversity reduces their impact on humans and provides a form of global health insurance, biodiversity experts say.

At the same time, intrusion into the world’s areas of high biodiversity disturbs these biological reservoirs and exposes people to new forms of infectious disease, according to Dr. Peter Daszak, one of 700 experts from 60 countries convening in Oaxaca, Mexico for a landmark conference dedicated to the convergence of all biodiversity-related sciences.

Identifying the value to people of biodiversity-related ecosystem services such as disease regulation, climate regulation, storm protection and habitat for useful species is a dominant theme of the First DIVERSITAS Open Science Conference, Nov. 9-12, co-hosted by the Mexican government. Some 450 presentations are scheduled in issue areas ranging from biology to economics and international law, with emphasis on the positive benefits of conservation.

Biodiversity not only stores the promise of new medical treatments and cures, it buffers humans from organisms and agents that cause disease, according to Dr. Daszak, Executive Director of the Consortium for Conservation Medicine, at Wildlife Trust, New York, and member of the DIVERSITAS Scientific Steering Committee.

Growing human contact with wildlife through invasion of forest habitat and the use of wildlife for food or medicine is responsible for the emergence of a series of lethal human diseases that originated in animals, most famously SARS, HIV-AIDS and Ebola, he says, adding that preventing emerging diseases through biodiversity conservation is far more cost effective than developing vaccines to combat them later.

Part of a scientific team that recently connected Asian bats in China with the SARS virus, Dr. Daszak says it’s important to draw lessons from that $50 billion global health crisis when looking ahead to the Asian bird flu and health problems yet to emerge.

“Cutting down contact between wildlife, domestic animals, poultry and people is the way to reduce the risk of spreading disease," says Dr. Daszak: “Persuading policy makers of this is the big challenge. The key is to understand the process of emerging infectious diseases so that we can deal with them proactively before they become a major health threat.”

As with many environmental issues, scientists now realize that a range of measures are involved in preserving ecosystem services such as disease regulation, including sanitary and health directives, education, capacity building, price and tax measures.

Valuing Biodiversity

The Oaxaca conference assembles many perspectives from the natural and social sciences to highlight the causes and consequences of biodiversity loss. Following closely the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment launch, it examines changes in beneficial ecosystem services and the economic causes and consequences of biodiversity loss.

“We are only beginning to understand the relative importance of biodiversity in the provision of services and the trade-offs involved different conservation and development options,” says Arizona State University Professor Charles Perrings, Vice-Chair of the DIVERSITAS Scientific Steering Committee.

“People have to decide what to conserve or use, where to conserve or use it, and what mechanisms to use. The DIVERSITAS conference represents a landmark event in policy-relevant science, showing how science is being harnessed to help develop conservation strategies by analyzing the benefits offered by different strategies.”

“The value of services provided by nature and its diversity is under appreciated until they stop,” says Anne Larigauderie, Executive Director of Paris-based DIVERSITAS.

“Examples abound of services provided free by nature for which expensive artificial replacements are now required. In one part of China, for instance, the loss of bees to pollinate apple trees has caused orchard owners to hire people to do the job. Elsewhere, the loss of microbes that helped keep soil fertile forces farmers to turn to fertilizers.”

“There is a very positive story to be told about the social benefits of investment in conservation,” says Dr. Larigauderie. “Unfortunately, because these services are so difficult to value, the benefits derived from them are often ignored in policy decisions and private activities that lead to irrevocable environmental change. The result: disappearing natural ecosystems, biodiversity loss, and the decline of beneficial ecological functions.”

Biodiversity and the dynamics of infectious disease

In the case of disease regulation, the costs of ecological service degradation are the costs of the diseases themselves.

Among other presenters, Scientists Matt Thomas, Kevin Lafferty and Carolyn Friedman say increases or decreases in species richness and composition affect the dynamics of infectious disease.

In a joint paper to be introduced at the conference as part of a new DIVERSITAS book, they say diversity of both disease agents and their hosts play an important role in disease dynamics in natural as well as managed systems.

For example, pre-infection with one type of virus reduces the death rate in shrimp and rainbow trout when subsequently infected by a more deadly virus. Meanwhile, in an experiment in China, farmers who planted a sacrificial row of rice susceptible to a disease every four to six rows were able to control “rice blast” disease in the rest of the crop and increase yield.

However, Dr. Thomas and colleagues note that presence of other species not directly linked to a particular host-pathogen combination can also influence disease risk and spread. One factor implicated in the increased prevalence of Lyme disease in the eastern U.S., for example, is a reduction in the predators that check the populations of white-footed mice, the main reservoir of the disease. They also note that the impact on humans of Lyme disease in the U.S. decreases in states with more varied potential targets for the ticks that transmit the disease, such as small mammals and lizards.

Conference participants will also learn how West Nile Virus (WNV) carrying mosquitoes prefer some bird species and avoid others, how additional species are likely to be impacted, how impacts might be reduced, and how to reduce the risk of WNV mosquitoes from infecting the unique bird populations of Hawaii and the Galapagos.

Dr. Daszak says the prospect of West Nile Virus entering Hawaii via aircraft is both serious and growing.

"We estimate that up to 70 West Nile-infected mosquitos are going to land in Hawaii every year for the foreseeable future. It's a big risk. If WNV gets into Hawaii it will cause human deaths, cost millions of dollars in health care and affect Hawaii's tourist trade. It will also probably affect some of the native birds and possibly cause extinctions. The highly endangered Hawaiian crow is particularly at risk.

“Knowing this we can act to cut down on the risk of WNV mosquitoes hitching a ride on planes by using residual insecticides inside the cargo holds.”

Other research to be showcased at the conference describes:

• How cutting-edge technologies and genetic science is revealing new organisms on land and in the oceans that look and function very differently, some with entirely new metabolisms. One instrument in development would allow researchers to immediately identify a plant or animal in the wild, understand how species are related to each other and help create an authoritative portrait of the “tree of life”;

• How the ability of different tree species to absorb and store carbon may be used to slow climate change;

• How introducing species to a new environment sometimes transplants invasive diseases and other problems. Exotic bee species imported for crop pollination, for example, appear to have also caused the spread of unwelcome new weeds while several species of frogs have gone extinct from diseases introduced through the importation from elsewhere of frogs as food and pets;

• How destroying wetlands increased human vulnerability to recent natural disasters;

• How the extinction and endangerment of freshwater species, which provide a wide variety of goods and services for humanity, greatly exceeds that of terrestrial, marine, or vertebrate species; and

• How biodiversity-based solutions are being drawn from ecological and traditional knowledge to reduce the negative impacts of intensive modern agriculture on the environment, human health and wild species.

* * * * *
First DIVERSITAS Open Science Conference
Integrating biodiversity science
for human well-being

9-12 November 2005,
Hotel Mision de Los Angeles, Oaxaca, Mexico

More than 700 leading natural and social scientists from 60 countries will attend the first open science conference, convened Paris-based DIVERSITAS to integrate knowledge about the relationship between humans and the world’s biological resources.

Goals of the conference:
• develop ways to determine the true value of biodiversity (economic, social and cultural); and
• provide the scientific basis for decision-making (at policy and personal levels) that reflects these values in the effort to conserve vital resources.

Key questions to be addressed include:
• How biodiversity is changing and why;
• The consequences of change for ecosystems and for the delivery of ecosystem goods and services;
• How to promote more sustainable use of biodiversity and improve human well-being

More than 450 presentations will reveal recent findings across virtually all ecosystems, explain the development and application of new technologies, and challenge current thinking about human activities that are having the greatest impact on biodiversity change.

Sampling of Symposia Topics:

bioDISCOVERY
• Oceans of biodiversity: Discovering species, habitats and ecologies
• Biodiversity informatics: Acquisition, analysis, archiving and applications
• Remote sensing: Methods and applications to assess, monitor and manage biodiversity loss
• Global environmental change and biodiversity: Integrating observations, experiments and models
• Theoretical advances in evolutionary conservation biology
• Phylogeny and biodiversity science bioSUSTAINABILITY
• Understanding and managing biodiversity conflicts
• Sustaining partnerships for community-based conservation
• Implementing multilateral environmental agreements on biodiversity: Balancing equity and effectiveness
• Biodiversity, human-well-being, and the Millennium Ecosystem Assessment
• Wildlife conservation and economic development in East and Southern Africa

ecoSERVICES
• Biodiversity and litter decomposition: A cross-systems perspective
• Symposium on pollination services
• Forest biodiversity and carbon sequestration
• The insurance value of biodiversity
• Marine biodiversity and ecosystem functioning
Cross-cutting Networks
• Biodiversity in agricultural landscapes: How to save our capital and not lose interest
• Eco-health and conservation medicine: A new agenda for public health and biodiversity
• Diversity, diversification processes and conservation of high mountains biota
• Freshwaters: Sustaining biodiversity and system integrity
• Impacts of invasive alien species on ecosystem services

* * * * *

DIVERSITAS (the Latin word for diversity) brings together biological, ecological and social sciences to address key questions that underlie our limited understanding of the current situation.
• How much biodiversity exists and how does its change or loss affect the system as a whole?
• How does biodiversity correspond to the delivery of ecosystem functions and services, and what is the true value of these commodities?
• How can scientific investigation support policy and decision making to encourage more sustainable use of biodiversity?
Armed with a broader, deeper knowledge of biodiversity, we will be better equipped to safeguard the future of Earth’s natural resources.

For more information, including media registration: www.diversitas-osc1.org or [email protected]

American Water Resources Association 2005 Annual Conference

The American Water Resources Association annual conference will cover a wide range of topics related to water resources management including the effects of natural catastrophes on water supplies and human health; the renewed interest in large-scale water projects, dam decommisioning, salmon recovery, and the increased risk to U.S. water supplies and the steps taken to counteract it. The conference will offer water professionals the opportunity to share insights and experiences with colleagues from across the country and to learn about the latest developments in various water resource-related fields.

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2005 Ecotourism Emerging Industry Online Forum

The Ecotourism Emerging Industry Forum is designed to provide professionally moderated, up-to-date results on small and medium enterprise (SME) priorities for funding and investment decisions for sustainable tourism in developing countries.

Proposed topics of the forum include:
* Developing Infrastructure for Sustainable Tourism
* Finance for SMEs' Needs
* Microenterprise Development Needs
* Market Development Needs
* Triple Bottom Line Business Structures & Strategies
* Interpretive Programme Development

Integrated River Basin Management Seminar

The Integrated River Basin Management Seminar will address five key topics facing the five main regions of Europe that participate in the Environmental Conference of the European Regions (ENCORE). The topics include: water quality aspects in low-density population areas (Aragon, Spain), analysis of ecological status at the regional level (Catalonia, Spain), water conservation and demand management (Romagna, Italy), economic tools for water management (Toscana, Italy), and treatment technologies for water (North Rhine – Westphalia, Germany).

Wetland and Riparian Area Legal Workshop

The target audience for the Wetland and Riparian Area Legal workshop is lawyers, regulators, and other staff from federal, statel, tribal, and local government agencies, consultants, landowners, staff of environmental organizations or others interested in identifying waters of the U.S. for Section 404 permitting and for other purposes. Specific paper topics will include Clean Water Act implications of SWANCC, Agency guidance concerning SWANCC; Federal, state and local programs to fill the gap created by SWANCC; and joint state/federal enforcement of CWA and state pollution laws to close the gap.

National Land Conservation Conference

Rally 2005 – the National Land Conservation Conference – is the largest land conservation
conference in the United States. This four day conference features workshops, plenary speeches, field trips and networking with the top conservation practitioners in the country.

Seminar on Environmental Services and Financing for the Protection and Sustainable Use of Ecosystems

The Seminar, a follow-up to the Seminar on the role of ecosystems as water suppliers (Geneva, 13-14 December 2004), will be organized around three major themes: valuing ecosystem services, legal and contractual aspects and challenges for implementation. One outcome will be to make a specific contribution to the ninth meeting of the Contracting Parties to the 1971 Ramsar Convention on Wetlands. This conference will bring together government officials, international organizations, nongovernmental organizations and the private sector.

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Building Foundations for Pro-Poor Ecosystem Services in Africa

In recent years, markets and payments for ecosystem services (PES), such as carbon sequestration, watershed protection and biodiversity conservation, have emerged in several African nations as a viable method for maintaining ecosystems and rewarding responsible environmental management. These mechanisms are generally appearing on an ad hoc basis, however, and little strategic dialogue has occurred to harmonize efforts to achieve broader economic and environmental objectives. In response, Forest Trends and the Katoomba Group are organizing the workshop, "Building Foundations for Pro-Poor Ecosystem Services in Africa," 19-22 September, 2005 in Uganda.

The objectives of this workshop are to strengthen the capacity for individuals to create PES mechanisms, to assess the current state of PES in Africa, to share information about past PES schemes in other regions of the world and to plan the systematic establishment of pro-poor PES schemes in East and Southern Africa. A diverse group of leaders from Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Malawi, and South Africa are involved with private business, policy making, community leadership, NGOs and academia are scheduled to attend, ensuring the integral players needed to establish PES (buyers, sellers, intermediaries, etc) will be represented.

Linking the Kyoto Project-Based Mechanisms with the EU ETS

UNIDO, in cooperation with the Government of Hungary, UK Trade and Investment and the European Commission, is organizing the seminar "Linking the Kyoto Project-Based Mechanisms with the EU ETS" in Vienna, Austria, 15-16 September 2005. The objective of the seminar is to provide a forum for business to advance the understanding and operationalization of emissions trading and its linkages with the CDM and JI. It will provide an opportunity for expert discussion and knowledge sharing among the countries that recently joined the EU, the accession countries and countries with economies in transition that are themselves likely to become hosts of JI projects.

Ecotourism in the US Conference

The first national conference on Ecotourism in the U.S. brings together experts and practitioners to discuss the issues surrounding ecotourism practices in the United States and to develop an action plan promoting the U.S. as an ecotourism destination.

10th International Specialized Conference on Watershed and River Basin Management 2005

Join other experts in exchanging ideas and exploring networking opportunities during the IWA Watershed and River Basin Management Conference. The six main themes of the conference will include Water Resource Management, Climate Change, Water Supply Protection, Sustainable Urban Drainage, Pollution Sources and Controls, and Monitoring and Modelling. The conference hopes to facilitate the adoption of new, innovative approaches and solutions to water and wastewater management.

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Regional Conference on Water, Health and Environment 2005

This will be the first in a series (every 2 years) of Regional Conferences initiated by Tanta University's Department of Water Engineering on remediation and restoration of water resources ecosystems. The conference is intended to bring together scholars, scientists, experts and researchers who contribute to policymaking and management decisions throughout the world to discuss and develop an approach to minimizing deterioration of the worlds' water resources

Water Environment Federation – Technology 2005

The focus of the Technology 2005 conference is (but is not limited to): Plant design, hydraulics and construction; Rehabilitation and upgrading of facilities, wastewater treatment including aerobic and anaerobic systems, nutrient removal, odor, and volatile organic compound control; technological responses to emerging contaminants of concern such as endocrine disruptors, new technologies for pretreatment and pollution prevention; recent developments in monitoring and detection; technologies for use in rural and developing locations; and energy efficient/alternative energy based technologies and systems. The sponsors are particularly interested in providing a forum for sharing information on state-of-the art practices with potential applications in the United States.

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Coastal Wetlands Conference

Specific objectives of the Coastal Wetlands Conference will be to 1) Find and highlight the best practices of coastal resource restoration so that these can be utilized by the many post-tsunami restoration projects in the region; 2)Raise awareness among a broad spectrum of stakeholders concerning long-term mangrove and related ecosystem conservation and restoration measures; 3)Alert and train restoration ecologists in the methodologies involved in successful restoration; and 4) the involvement of community leaders and grassroots NGOs in this process.

EU Emissions Trading

EU Emissions Trading 2005 will provide an update on the progress of the EU ETS since its launch in January. Top-level specialists from a broad range of organisations will give an in-depth and up-to-the minute examination of the EU ETS and first-hand experiences of trading in this new market.

The confernce is targeted to the following audience: energy providers; utilities; financial institutions; major emitters; government and regulatory bodies; law firms; and environmental consultants.

Working Session on Land Use and Bioenergy in the Clean Development Mechanism

On 30 June 2005, FAO, in collaboration with Joanneum Research and the BioCarbon Fund, is holding a working session for experts on bioenergy and land use in the CDM.

The Kyoto/Marrakech agreement provides for inclusion of Land Use, Land-Use Change and Forestry (LULUCF) activities in the Clean Development Mechanism (CDM), limited to afforestation and reforestation projects, and also for inclusion of energy-related projects, to the extent that they reduce emissions from fossil fuels. However, the agreement fails to recognize the interlinkages between land use and a key energy source for many developing countries, biomass energy. Negotiations focused on constraining LULUCF and dealing with permanence, leading to at least two problems:

It was and still is often assumed that bioenergy and other renewable energy sources are always eligible under the CDM. However, this is only the case when emissions from fossil fuels, or other emissions included in Annex A of the Kyoto Protocol are part of the baseline. The replacement of unsustainable biomass use with modern biomass fuels, or with other renewables such as wind energy or solar, is not eligible as a CDM activity as demonstrated in a recent submission by FAO and IEA Bioenergy to the CDM Executive Board.

Projects that combine afforestation/reforestation with the use of biomass to displace fossil fuels are subject to an additional barrier by having to submit two baseline and monitoring methodologies, two Project Design Documents, and having to undergo the CDM screening process twice.

Objectives of the Working Session
The purpose of the Working Session is to assess the above-mentioned issues, illustrate them with case studies, and propose solutions on how reductions of unsustainable bioenergy use in the CDM can be made eligible in the CDM. This will include a discussion of options on how land use and bioenergy could be better included under the Kyoto Protocol and subsequent climate agreements.

In particular, the Working Session will elaborate suggestions on how to address the definition of sustainable (or renewable) versus unsustainable (or non-renewable) biomass, will discuss existing cases and/or types of sustainable land-use/bioenergy systems and will identify necessary steps to reach their eligibility in the CDM.

If you are interested in participating, please contact [email protected] and [email protected]

Total Maximum Daily Load (TMDL) 2005 Conference

The Total Maximum Daily Load Conference 2005 will bring together water quality professionals and environmental experts for an exchange of information on challenging issues related to TMDL. TMDL 2005 will provide numerous networking opportunities and a forum for informational exchange. Technical session speakers will discuss how the TMDL process can be improved, how to approach complex water pollution problems, and how to use practical strategies to protect watersheds. The conference will also offer three workshops and an interactive tour designed to provide more detailed information and training on specific TMDL objectives.

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22nd National Meeting of the American Society of Mining and Reclamation

At its 22nd National Meeting in Breckenridge, Colorado, the American Society of Mining and Reclamation will address latest research results in mine reclamation and waste management, new developments in treatment technologies, and up-to-date methods and techniques for detection and management of mining-related contaminants.

4th International Seminar on Watershed Management

The course will include a mixture of instruction and facilitated discussions which will engage participants on critical global and regional watershed management issues, emphasizing innovative approaches to watersheds to work across a wide range of biophysical and socioeconomic settings. Particular attention will be given to the management of watersheds in developing and newly emerging market economies. Areas for training and discussion include: management technologies; watershed planning; extension and outreach services; stakeholder participation; management partnerships; financial transfer mechanisms for environmental services; and environmental education.

26th Annual International Wetlands Meeting

The 26th Annual International Wetlands Meeting will focus on ecological, landscape, and regulatory transformations of wetlands. The coastal plain will be highlighted as the last line of defense for pollutants that impact estuaries. Some proposed session titles include: wetland planning and conservation; ecological risk assessment, policy and regulations; wetland valuation; and wetland ecosystem modeling, ecological economics, and adaptive management.

Carbon Down, Profits Up

California business and government leaders will come together in this half-day event to discuss the economic benefits of greenhouse gas reductions. Presenting their successful business case experiences of acting to protect the climate are Peter Cartwright, CEO of Calpine Corporation, Eric Milledge, Company Chairman, LifeScan (a Johnson & Johnson Company), Patricia Voss, President, Fetzer Vineyards, Jeff Swartz, CEO, Timberland, Alan Lloyd, Agency Secretary, CalEPA, Sandra Taylor, Senior Vice President Corporate Social Responsibility, Starbucks, Brendan McDonagh, Chief Operating Officer, HSBC USA, David O’Connor, Managing Partner, Creative Artists Agency and Roger Peters, Senior Vice President and General Counsel of PG&E.

A buffet lunch will be served after the panel. Panellists will announce major new initiatives on emissions reductions and combating climate change and The Climate Group will release a new publication that profiles climate leadership by California companies and institutions.

Australian Business in a Kyoto World

This one-day seminar will explore the opportunities and threats for Australian business in a world where the Kyoto Protocol is in
force and international emissions trading is underway.

Topics covered include:
• Threats and opportunities
• National policy issues
• Trade partner implications
• New Zealand – your friend in the Protocol
• Securing credits from Clean Development Projects
• Issues for biosequestration
• Business responses – renewable energy, carbon farming, emissions trading

Climate of change: companies, carbon and the bottom line

Climate of change: companies, carbon and the bottom line is an event for those who are now addressing – or will soon have to address – the bottom-line impact (including from a risk mitigation perspective) of climate change on their company. This one day event will feature presentations on the investor response to climate change as well as panel discussions on climate change and valuation from both the buy and sell sides.

California Future Forests 2005

California Forest Futures 2005 is a two-day conference that will examine the forces dramatically re-shaping our forest landscapes and explore the strategies and actions necessary to secure an economic and ecologically rewarding future.

Join elected officials, policy makers, forest owners, foresters, land use planners, natural resource managers, environmentalist, conservationists, scientists, media and other concerned citizens as we come together to consider the critical choices facing the future of California's vital forestlands.

Honorary Chair: Mike Chrisman, California Secretary for Resources
Invited: Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger Senator Dianne Feinstein

Conference topics include:

+ Examining forest loss from increased competition to high costs to booming
real estate values

+ Assessing the impacts of forest loss and development on biodiversity,
water quality, fire threats, timber production and quality of life

+ Making California's forest industry more competitive in a global market while
simultaneously protecting forests

+ Adapting "smart growth" principles to lessen the impact of rural development

+ Developing new, ecological-based revenue streams from carbon sequestration,
water flows and habitat

+ Expanding the use of working conservation easements to preserve the private
forest infrastructure

+ Implementing financial, regulatory and other incentives to promote conservation

+ Promoting new strategies to engage more Californians with our forests

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