Birds Korea Update for Members: January - March 2010

This Update covers January 1st to March 31st 2010. It is in three parts:

1. Conservation News

2. Birds Korea News

3. Exceptional Bird Records

1. Conservation News

“Green Growth”: Sustainable Development or Doublespeak?

A survey in 2009 confirmed that 80% of the population in the Republic of Korea believes that "in planning development projects, environmental conservation should take precedence over economic gains" (Hwang 2009). Birds Korea is proud to be part of this 80%. With our membership we strive for sustainable development, as defined by the United Nations and the Millennium Development Goals. We work honestly, for the conservation of birds, habitats, culture and the peace of mind that comes from feeling part of the natural world.

But these are exasperating and contradictory times.

60 trillion Won ($52 billion) of state-initiated construction projects are now planned for 2010 (Korea Times January 29 2010), adding to the excesses of the past few years. 2010 sees planned resort developments (as on Gageo Island), more huge buildings and new roads, railway projects and trails through sensitive habitats (as at Suncheon Bay Ramsar site), and a growing number of massive developments (“mega-projects”). Many of these mega-projects are labelled as “green”, even though the impacts they have on biodiversity, on nature, landscapes and culture, are enormous. Our own Preliminary Report, for example, suggests that approximately 50 species of bird (more than one in ten recorded regularly in Korea), one-third of all waterbirds that winter in the ROK, and several globally-threatened species, will be negatively impacted by the Four Rivers Project


The new expressway just north of the Suncheon Ramsar site, Photo © Kim Haksoo

How can this happen?

Our nation, by being a contracting party to the intergovernmental Ramsar Convention has agreed to conserve all wetlands that are “internationally important” as defined by Ramsar criteria.

Our nation has also agreed to conserve populations of migratory waterbirds. It has done so through national laws, through joining the Ramsar Convention and the Convention on Biological Diversity, and through signing bilateral agreements.

Our nation, as a member of the United Nations, also supports the Millennium Development Goals. The Millennium Development Goals make clear that solving one environment problem (such as energy use) should not be at the cost of creating another problem (such as causing biodiversity loss). Instead, genuinely sustainable development finds ways to solve problems simultaneously, to create win-win situations that benefit both the nation and the planet that all of us share.

These are the commitments to conservation that the nation has willingly, publicly and formally accepted on behalf of and for the benefit of us all. These are the commitments and the promises that Birds Korea and many others are working to protect. Conserving birds and their habitats means conserving other species and the ecosystems they depend on. In turn, conserving the most bio-diverse ecosystems provides multiple benefits to people, including healthy water, healthy food, a healthy climate and beautiful places of culture, for recreation and education.

It is clear that the majority of people here in the ROK, indeed 80% of us, and many people around the world support policies that work for genuinely sustainable development.

So, what are some of the mega-projects that are claiming to be sustainable and green?

Saemangeum

During the past decade, as a growing number of people started to express concern about the anticipated global impacts of the massive 40,100 ha Saemangeum reclamation on migratory birds, the response by proponents was not to cancel or scale the project down. Rather, they promised that the destruction of tidal-flats and sea shallows to create rice-fields would actually be “environmentally-friendly”, and would even lead to an increase in waterbirds (Birds Korea 2003).

By the passing of special laws, the primary end-use of Saemangeum has become industrial. Yet the proponents continue to sell this massive “green and gold” reclamation both at home and overseas as an eco-friendly project, creating wetlands and eco-parks, worthy of investment. The repackaging has convinced at least some investors and media.

This greenwash effort at Saemangeum, however, undermines calls to restore tidal-flow at Saemangeum. It stimulates calls for further reclamation in the ROK and the Yellow Sea.

While some may argue that money should not be wasted on restoration, it is important to remember that the restoration of tidal-flow at Saemangeum would cost far less than the Four Rivers Project, and provide more obvious benefits. Moreover, the huge costs of the Saemangeum reclamation are still increasing: economically, culturally and for biodiversity. The Saemangeum Shorebird Monitoring Program (conducted by Birds Korea and the Australasian Wader Studies Group) confirms that the massive loss of habitat at Saemangeum by 2008 had already contributed to the rapid global decline of the now Critically Endangered Spoon-billed Sandpiper, and the “loss” of 20% of the world’s Great Knot (Moores et al. 2008). And how much more will all the new inner sea-walls, roads and water purification plants cost?

It is never too late to do the right thing, especially when reclamation at Saemangeum and elsewhere in the Yellow Sea is resulting in massive and measurable declines in a broad range of shorebird species and when the sea’s fisheries are in such decline. How much is biodiversity, how much are the fisheries, and how much is the nation’s word worth?

Despite its clarity, the science measuring the costs of reclamation is still ignored by reclamation proponents, at Saemangeum and elsewhere, and by the proponents of other mega-projects. The prolonged domestic and international criticism of the Saemangeum reclamation did have results, however.

The ROK formally announced in 2008 that “intertidal mudflats should be preserved and that no large-scale reclamation projects are now being approved in the Republic of Korea” (Ramsar Resolution X.22).

The nation also elected to host a number of high-profile international environmental conferences (including the Ramsar Convention conference, the IUCN World Congress and meetings of the East Asia-Australasia Flyway Partnership). And the nation has embarked on a new green direction with the New Green Deal and the emphasis on Green Growth. But with all the words, have the actual policies after close of the Saemangeum seawall in 2006 actually changed?

Song Do & the Incheon Tidal Power Plant

In March 2009, only five months after the public promise of Ramsar Resolution X.22, the large-scale reclamation of the last remaining area of internationally important tidal-flat at Song Do in Incheon was approved (Birds Korea 2009).

This year, up to 20 US-based universities have been in talks, apparently to receive funds from the ROK to establish overseas campuses on very recently-reclaimed land in the same Song Do “Eco-city” (e.g. "Danney 2010): more investment in reclamation. The threatened tidal-flat at Song Do, supporting 13 species of waterbirds in Ramsar-defined internationally important concentrations, and the proposed Song Do Global University Campus, ironically both lie within view of the newly-established office of the East Asian-Australasian Flyway Partnership. This Partnership is working hard for the conservation of migratory birds and their habitats. Its office is now funded by Incheon City, the main reclamation proponent.

Incheon City is also proposing the world’s largest tidal power plant (one of several now planned), requiring the construction of several massive concrete dykes and the impoundment of 15,700 ha of Ramsar-defined internationally important inter-tidal mudflats lying between Ganghwa Island and Yeongjong, next to the nation’s main international airport. This stunningly beautiful and natural wetland is one of the first sights to greet home-comers and visitors to Korea alike. These natural tidal-flats sequester carbon (a vital role in controlling climate change), provide a place of peace and recreation for people, and they support the globally Endangered Red-crowned Crane Grus japonensis in winter, and large numbers of the globally Endangered Black-faced Spoonbill Platelea minor and Globally Vulnerable Chinese Egret Egretta eulophotes in summer. These three species are National Natural Monuments. Should this internationally important wetland be destroyed in order to make “environmentally friendly” energy for Incheon City?

There are already different tidal power plant designs that are believed to cause many fewer impacts on biodiversity (e.g. as reported in popular media by Cho 2009 and Strain 2010). However, an initial agreement has been struck with GS Engineering & Construction, and construction of the dykes is planned to start in the second half of 2011 (Anon 2010). Most, if not all, developed nations have laws that would prevent such a project from even proceeding.

The Four Rivers Project

On a narrow peninsula surrounded on three sides by sea, the proposed Korean Grand Canal offered the peculiar promise of ships sailing across mountains through the canalisation of the nation’s main rivers. After a growing wave of opposition, and as the ROK prepared to host the 2008 Ramsar Convention conference (Ramsar COP10), the “Central government took the bold and highly welcome step of suspending the Korean Grand Canal Project ...” (Moores 2008).

A little over a month after Ramsar COP10, however, the Grand Canal was replaced by the even grander “Four Main Rivers Restoration Project”, now lying at the heart of the new Green Growth strategy. Coming with the price-tag of a minimum 19 Billion USD (Science magazine March 26 2010), it has the stated aims of reducing flooding, securing more water reserves and puzzlingly (considering the emphasis on construction), helping the nation to combat human-induced climate change.

Its packaging as a restoration project had until recently helped it to escape much international review or criticism, and has likely helped persuade many (including decision-makers) to believe in its green credentials. All the same, the Four Rivers Project is still opposed by 70% of the population in the ROK (Doh 2010), and international awareness is growing, especially following an article in Reuters and more detailed coverage by the US-based Science magazine (March 26th), under the heading of “Restoration or Devastation?”.

While there is an undoubted need to restore the nation’s already degraded rivers, floodplain wetlands and estuaries and to curb fast-growing rates of greenhouse gas emission, this Four Rivers Project is clearly not “restoration” as popularly understood or as described in the conservation and scientific literature. Rather it is the latest in a line of mega-projects that includes Saemangeum, Song Do “Eco-city”, and the proposed Incheon Tidal Power Plant.

With an environmental impact assessment (EIA) that was conducted in only three or four months, the Four Rivers Project was launched in November 2009. As presently proposed, the first phase alone entails the deep-dredging of almost 700 km of shallow river, the construction of 16 new dams, the re-construction of two estuarine barrages, and the building of over 1700 km of bicycle road along four of the nation’s largest rivers (The Han, the Nakdong, the Geum and the Yeongsan). This phase will lead to habitat degradation of at least one Ramsar site and probably eight Important Bird Areas, and increase disturbance greatly in many presently wildlife-rich areas, including stretches of river used by the very shy Scaly-sided Merganser. The second (simultaneous) phase adds five more new dams to the tributaries of the main rivers, and the “refurbishment” of over 2,000 km of streams and small rivers.

Both phases one and two will be completed by 2012 – the year in which the ROK hosts the next IUCN World Congress.

The third phase, as part of the subsequent Master Plan for Rivers (to be released this year), then aims for the “fuller utilisation” of a further 13,000 km of stream and river nationwide (MLTM, 2009). If conducted with contemporary river-engineering methods (see e.g. Hadley 2007) this phase too will cause much further loss of biodiversity nationwide.

As part of this mega-project, numerous eco-parks and “eco-rivers” will be built. It is unclear what form these will take. However, existing eco-parks typically include large buildings, new roads and ornamental shrubbery – requiring in Suncheon Bay Ramsar site for example, the concreting and grassing-over of several rice-fields which had been used by wintering Hooded Cranes. The term “eco-river” appears to have been newly-coined. One formal document reveals, however, that eco-rivers are to be used for planting and harvesting of trees for biofuel – part of the national strategy to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.


Suncheon Bay Eco Park, Photo © Kim Haksoo

The Four Rivers Project has since its inception been sold as a “green” project. Ads in media and display panels set up in train and ferry stations (advertising already projected to cost 14.5 billion Korean Won by the end of 2010: Doh 2010) repeatedly depict green-lined rivers, with deep blue waters, often over-flown by skeins of Red-crowned Cranes. This is an appealing fantasy, but it is not scientifically credible, and it has not persuaded the majority of people. Opponents, in the ROK, include 70% of people, all well-known environmental NGOs, the 2400-strong “Professors’ Organisation for Movement Against Korean Grand Canal”, and overseas, an increasing number of specialist organisations.

In response, the ministry behind the project, the Ministry of Land, Transport and Maritime Affairs (MLTM), asserts that all those opposing the Four Rivers Project simply do not understand about rivers or the environment. The same kinds of things were said about those opposing the reclamation of Saemangeum. Conservation organisations, including Birds Korea, however, predicted the anticipated impacts of the Saemangeum reclamation clearly, honestly and accurately. We are again anticipating major negative impacts on the nation’s biodiversity if the Four Rivers goes ahead as presently proposed.

Those in charge of the Four Rivers appear unconcerned. The MLTM admits it has “no information” on the Scaly-sided Merganser (Oliver 2009), a globally Endangered species that is ecologically dependent upon shallow rivers, including the Four Rivers. This statement was even made after the EIA for the Four Rivers Project had been completed. As the species is recorded regularly by the Ministry of Environment’s winter bird census (MOE Census), are those in charge of the project simply choosing to ignore the Ministry of Environment’s own data?

Either way, the MLTM is still selling the Four Rivers as a restoration project, concluding in January that “Domestically assessment has been negative, but foreigners have been very positive.” (Doh 2010).

It is for reasons such as these that court-cases have been launched aiming to stop the Four Rivers Project, and why we are asking conservation organisations overseas to add their voices of concern to those in Korea. Let reason triumph, and let money already allocated for the Four Rivers be invested instead in genuine restoration and conservation of rivers, wetlands, of Saemangeum, of the cultural and biodiversity heritage – a win-win outcome.

To help inform civil society and decision-makers to this end, we therefore published our bilingual preliminary report on the “Anticipated Impacts of the Four Rivers Project on Waterbirds” in March 2010, providing drafts to government departments (including the MLTM and the Ministry of Environment), other NGOs and wetland experts for fact-checking and input. This preliminary report fills several important information gaps, through providing background information on the nation’s rivers and waterbirds, and by describing some of the more obvious threats to waterbirds through e.g. (1) reduced flood-pulse, (2) loss of shallow river habitat, (3) increased degradation and reduced opportunity for the restoration of estuaries, and (4) increase in disturbance.

As there is no comprehensive waterbird monitoring program in place, the report is based largely on data from an annual one-day MOE Census, in addition to extensive review of scientific literature. Species and some of the sites that are likely to be affected by phase one of the Four Rivers Project are identified, including 48 out of >140 sites now covered by the MOE Census. We believe that, if treated with due caution, data from these 48 sites can provide useful insight into the numbers of waterbirds and the species likely to be most affected, and in future years should enable some of the impacts, negative and positive, of the Four Rivers Project to be monitored and assessed with greater confidence.

It is clear already though: unsustainable mega-projects like these devastate the natural resource base and lead to the loss of ecosystem services. The lack of best-practice EIA and concern for biodiversity that presently underlie much of the development in the ROK is driving species’ declines, preventing fulfilment of existing conservation obligations, and eroding trust – to the cost of the national image. Already our nation's global ranking in the independent global Environmental Performance Index has plunged - from 51st place in 2008 to 94th place at the beginning of 2010. In the same index, our nation is also ranked 147th out of 163 countries for efforts to reduce greenhouse gas emissions. (Korea Times January 29 2010).

The green packaging is fooling fewer and fewer people. Unsustainable development is losing the confidence and the potential investments of ethical investors. Genuinely sustainable development, in line with the Millennium Development Goals and existing conservation obligations, is urgently needed, in order to conserve key sites and species, to restore degraded ecosystems, and to conserve the beauty and culture of the nation. By protecting and cherishing the best of Korea, the nation will win more overseas investment, and help to strengthen the economy, the national brand and the nation as a whole.

We need less doublespeak and more conservation. The nation needs to win-win, instead of to lose-lose.

References

see: (Korea's) Falling Environmental Ranking

Korea Times January 29th 2010
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/opinon/2010/01/137_59951.html

2. Birds Korea News

The first three months of the year have again been extraordinarily busy, with more research for the Birds Korea Blueprint for the Conservation of the Avian Biodiversity of the South Korean Yellow Sea (the Blueprint), production of our Four Rivers Preliminary Report, presentations (in the ROK and overseas), and some closer ties built, at the local, national and international levels.

In the first three months of 2010 our work included, but was not limited to:

Research

Field work continued for the Blueprint with further seabird transects conducted, in addition to counts of over-wintering species (including Black Woodpigeon Columba janthina on Gageo Island), on Socheong Island and at Mokpo Namhang Urban Wetland. We now have counts of seabirds at sea between the mainland and Socheong and Gageo in all 12 months of the year. Analysis of this data has now begun.

An extensive literature review and analysis of MOE Census data (1999-2009) was also conducted as part of our work on the Four Rivers.

We are now appealing to our members and overseas birdwatchers visiting the ROK to help us with gathering data on migrants especially on offshore islands. We are looking for information on first arrival dates and peak counts of common species, supported by information on observer effort. This information will be extremely helpful in learning more about migration across the Yellow Sea and in starting to identify species most in decline. Please contact us for more information!

Planning and Design

Our work for the Mokpo Namhang Urban Wetland continues, with e.g. a presentation introducing our design proposal at the Yellow Sea Science Conference in Xiamen, China. We also were invited in March to provide Mokpo City officials with advice on the possible location of a birdwatching hide overlooking the site.

Also in March, we started discussions with the local environmental organisation Suncheon Dongsayeon on ways in which to help conserve Suncheon Bay Ramsar site. Local city plans for the site are changing the near-natural wetland into a much more artificial “Eco- park”. Although there have been some very positive steps taken (including blocking the main road around the rice-fields used by the Hooded Cranes Grus monacha, and removing power lines from the same fields), much habitat has been lost or disturbed due to excessive development in and upstream of the wetland in recent years – including the building of a massive centre and car park, a new hill top trail, river “cleaning”, a new boat harbour for tourist boats and the construction of a new expressway close to the site. There is little doubt that the wetland is being steadily degraded by these projects, and that its ecological character is changing. While the Hooded Cranes continue to increase (due to artificial feeding and milder winters), many more sensitive species are being lost. There is a need to develop a much clearer conservation plan for the site, one which long-term provides benefits for local communities and biodiversity rather than one which is based on maximising the number of visitors.


Suncheon Bay Eco-park Information Map: main buildings shown towards the centre, Photo © Kim Haksoo


Suncheon Bay Ramsar Wetland of International Importance: main “Eco-centre”, Photo © Brian Deutsch

With so many threats and challenges to birds and their habitats in the region, there is an obvious need get one step-ahead, to develop a clearer vision, and to identify conservation approaches that work and approaches that have failed. This is why we are developing the Blueprint. The Blueprint is a planning document that will provide a framework aimed at bridging science and policy, supported by up-to-date information on key sites and species (grouped by habitat).

Work on the Blueprint in the next two months includes further field research and the organisation of maps and satellite images, to start to measure the area of remaining tidal-flat.

We are already encouraged by offers of information from some other key NGOs working in the region, and especially by the confirmation of a 6000 UK Pound grant from the UK-based Rufford Small Grant: thank you! We always welcome greater collaboration and your support – funding, technical, translation, ideas and advice. Please get involved, wherever you live.

Awareness-raising and Education

Much of March was spent raising awareness of the threats to avian biodiversity posed by the Four Rivers Project. During development of the Birds Korea Preliminary Report on the Four Rivers we contacted numerous experts and specialist groups, and we again thank the International Crane Foundation, the World Wetlands Network, Eco-Horizon Institute, PGA Institute, Supchi Wa Seiduri Chingu (WBK) and the Korean NGO Wetlands Network (KWNN) for their endorsement of the Four Rivers Preliminary Report.

Following publication of the Preliminary Report on March 17th, Birds Korea presented some of the conclusions at a symposium organised by the Uiryeong Forum in Seoul on March 18th.

Most domestic media presently appear reluctant to discuss the Four Rivers Project in much detail. However, the Preliminary Report was picked up by Reuters, and also by the US-based Science Magazine, helping greatly to increase international understanding of the issue. Copies of the Preliminary Report have also been sent to several leading international NGOs and the link to the online version has been sent to the UNEP Asia office. We hope that this will assist understanding and encourage the fuller expression of international concern, including advice to decision-makers on how to reduce the negative impacts of this and other mega-projects.

And finally, much closer to home, we are happy to welcome several of the families in “Aidul Seisang” (in Guseo Dong) to Birds Korea. We are proposing a series of once-a-month environmental education meetings for these families, with the first meeting on April 10th.

Busy times ahead! How about joining and helping to make a difference!

3. Exceptional Bird Records

Increased coverage has confirmed that several species that until recently were thought to be rare are now known to be regular in winter in the ROK (e.g. Yellow-billed Loon Gavia adamsii and Brunnich’s Murre Uria lomvia). While we continue to gather and collate records of such species, below are the most significant or noteworthy observations in the period made by Birds Koreans, or by other observers. These are taken from our own and other leading birding websites, including the websites of the National Parks Migratory Bird Research Centre, KWBS and BirdDB. Nomenclature, order and status codes follow The Birds Korea Checklist (2009).

Mute Swan Cygnus olor W5
More widespread than in recent winters. A lagoon in Gangwon province held 15 through the first half of the month (BirdDb.com), which is apparently the highest count since 2003. An immature seen at Shiwha Lake on January 9th by Choi Jang-Young was still present towards the month’s end (BirdDb.com). Four were also present in South Chungcheong Province early in the month, when also one was at a separate location in Gangwon Province (BirdDb.com). On January 26th, two immatures were photographed in Jinju by Mike Friel. A further family of six were photographed in North Gyeongsang Province late in the month (BirdDb.com).


Mute Swan Cygnus olor, Photo © Mike Friel

Scaly-sided Merganser Mergus squamatus EN, W5
19 counted along the Southeast River during two separate counts by Mike Friel is the highest count known to Birds Korea this winter. The species was also wintering on at least four other river stretches during the period under review. Of special interest are the results of as yet unpublished research on Russian-breeding Scaly-sided Merganser showing that the species migrates through the Korean peninsula during both southward and northward migration (see our Preliminary Four Rivers Report for more details).

Steppe Eagle Aquila nipalensis V2
One taken into care in Suncheon during the winter is approximately the 9th national record.

Siberian Crane Grus leucogeranus CR, V2
A belated record concerns one photographed by Kim Shin-Hwan and others at an undisclosed location in Gangwon Province in November 2009. This is believed to the tenth national record of the species.

Red Phalarope Phalaropus fulicarius V1
One photographed on January 23rd at Guryongpo (Falk Wicker, Andreas Seeger, Gunter Ehlers, Christoph Urban & Nial Moores) is the first confirmed mid-winter record known to Birds Korea.


Red Phalarope Phalaropus fulicarius, Photo © Nial Moores

Heuglin’s Gull Larus heuglini barabensis V1
An adult Heuglin’s Gull assigned to the subspecies barabensis was photographed at Seosan in February 7th (Nial Moores, Dave and Christine Holman) in the exact same location as a sub-adult photographed there in March 2005.

Relict Gull Ichthyaetus relictus VU, W5
This species is still often overlooked, but is declining rapidly. During the period only seven were reported: two at Seosan from January until the end of February, and one at Hwaseong/Namyang Bay on February 1st (Jang Byoung-Soon), increasing to five by March 1st (Song In-sik on KWBS).

Little Owl Athene noctua V1
Reported from three separate locations in January. The first was photographed at Cheorwon, Gangwon Province, on January 3rd by Lee Sang-Il. Two more were photographed in North Jeolla Province and South Chungcheong Province in early January (BirdDb.com).

White-bellied Green Pigeon Treron sieboldii V1
One male was apparently photographed in South Jeolla Province in mid-March and posted to BirdDb.com(details withheld). On Jeju Island, a female seen by Matt Poll and Kim Young-Ho on March 20th was still present on March 25th when seen by Tim Edelsten & Matt Poll.


White-bellied Green Pigeon Treron sieboldii, Photo © Mathew Poll

Plumbeous Water Redstart Rhyacornis fuliginosa V1
An adult male was photographed in late February (BirdDb.com: details withheld). Two adult males were present and apparently in territory in Daejeon throughout March (when seen and photographed by many observers). In addition, during the first week of March another adult male returned, apparently for its third year, to a site in South Gyeongsang Province (Rob Macfie).


Plumbeous Water Redstart Rhyacornis fuliginosa, Photo © Robin Newlin

Asian Rosyfinch Leucosticte arctoa WV2
A rare and irruptive winter visitor. Six or seven were photographed on a southern mountain range in mid-January (details withheld). Ten were reported in North Jeolla Province on January 19th by Im Kwang-Wan, and still present on January 25th when photographed by Jong Jin-Mun, and a flock of 20 were present at this or another site in the same province until mid-March (details withheld). At Geojin, Gangwon Province, 37 were counted by Nial Moores, Christoph Urban, Gunter Ehlers, Andreas Seeger and Falk Wicker on January 22nd, but could not be found the following day.


Asian Rosy Finch Leucosticte arctoa, Photo © Nial Moores

Finally, a gentle reminder to all of our members (past and present) living in Korea. Birds Korea depends entirely on the support of our members and volunteers. Donations and domestic membership fees are vital to us! Please renew your membership and help us to help the birds!

This update was prepared through the joint efforts of Nial Moores, Kim Sona, Andreas Kim, Park Meena, and Tim Edelsten, with contributions by many members.

Birds Korea, March 31st 2010.