Rabu, 14 November 2007

The carbon calculus

CARBON DIOXIDE/CAP AND TRADE SYSTEM


A change is in the works that could go a long way toward making alternative energy less alternative, and more attractive to consumers and businesses.

It's not a technological fix from some solar-cell laboratory in Silicon Valley or wind-turbine researcher in Colorado or the development of some superbug to turn wood waste into ethanol.

Rather, the change would come from Washington, if Congress does what it has talked about and puts a price tag on greenhouse-gas emissions. Suddenly the carbon content of fuel, or how much carbon dioxide is produced per unit of energy, would be as important as what the fuel costs. In fact, it might largely define what the fuel costs.

That could shake up the economics of energy, handicapping some fuels and favoring others. Those that produce hefty emissions, like coal and oil, would likely look much worse. And some — sunlight, wind, uranium, even corn stalks and trash as well as natural gas — would probably look much better. "Carbon-negative" fuels that take carbon dioxide out of the atmosphere as they are made, might even become feasible.

Carbon dioxide is what economists call an "externality," something that imposes a cost on somebody other than the manufacturer. At some point, the thinking goes, Congress will force industries to pay those costs, either with a tax or a cap-and-trade system in which allowances will cost money. The consensus in the energy business is that lawmakers will come up with a charge that could start at $10 per metric ton or more.

On Thursday, a Senate subcommittee approved a bill to establish a cap-and-trade system for carbon dioxide, and the Democratic leadership is eager to have the Senate pass it by year's end. But prospects in the House are less certain.

Still, with all the talk about a carbon charge, "your perspective shifts," said Revis James, an economist at the Electric Power Research Institute, a nonprofit utility consortium in Palo Alto, Calif. "We're definitely going to be paying a bill here for wanting to reduce these emissions."

Some companies are already counting on paying such a bill. In October, NRG, an electric company in Princeton, N.J., made the first application in three decades for permission to build a nuclear power plant. In an interview, the chairman, David Crane, said his calculations showed that such a plant would be cost effective if the price of carbon dioxide emissions ran into "double digits" per ton.

The Electric Power Research Institute's staff estimates the effect of a charge on carbon dioxide emissions on the price of a kilowatt-hour, the amount of electricity needed to run 10 100-watt bulbs for an hour. Natural gas produces 0.84 pounds of carbon dioxide per kilowatt-hour, and coal produces more than twice as much, 1.9 pounds.

At $10 per metric ton, the impact is minimal. But at $50 a ton, for example, the cost of a kilowatt-hour produced by coal goes from about 5.7 cents to about 10 cents. Wind power currently isn't competitive, according to the institute's calculation, but it becomes competitive when carbon dioxide costs $25 a ton. By their calculations, nuclear energy, with negligible carbon dioxide emissions, looks sensible at a small carbon charge.

Here's how the new economics might work for solar power, according to Charles F. Gay, the vice president and general manager of solar business at Applied Materials, a California semiconductor company that has branched into that field.

Solar power from photovoltaic cells is very expensive, about 25 to 30 cents per kilowatt-hour. But compare a kilowatt-hour produced by such cells, which emit no carbon dioxide, with one produced by a conventional coal plant. At $20 or $30 a ton, the 1.9 pounds of carbon dioxide emitted in producing that kilowatt-hour costs 2 to 3 cents. That cuts into coal's price advantage and — when coupled with progress in reducing the cost of solar power through manufacturing and economies of scale — gives solar power "a much larger chance to be relevant," Mr. Gay said. Solar thermal systems, which use mirrors to concentrate sunlight to boil water, might benefit even sooner.

The new calculus of energy would not be limited to electricity. Like a kilowatt-hour, a gallon of ethanol is a commodity. But its impact on the environment depends on how it is made. Ethanol is a prime example of a product with what Lee Schipper, an energy and transportation expert at the World Resources Institute, calls "closet carbon." That is, carbon dioxide embedded in the production of what is supposedly a renewable product.

For example, Range Fuels, of Denver, plans to open a plant in Soperton, Ga., next year to make ethanol from pine tree waste. About 25 percent of the tree cannot go to a lumber mill or paper mill, the company says, and is usually left behind when the forest is clear-cut. If it is burned, it produces carbon dioxide. If it rots, it produces methane, an even more potent greenhouse gas.

Range has a thermochemical method for turning the waste — bark, cones, treetops, needles and small branches — into ethanol. Burning ethanol creates carbon dioxide no matter how it was made. But the economics could vary if Range got credit for producing a fuel by using material that was going to turn into a greenhouse gas anyway.

In contrast, corn ethanol is made using natural gas or coal that also contains carbon, but could have stayed in the ground if not for the ethanol manufacture. Ethanol advocates say that some gallons of corn ethanol have twice as much closet carbon as others. One new approach to ethanol uses algae; in Arizona, a utility is testing a process to fertilize algae with carbon dioxide captured from an adjacent power plant. The algae can be grown and processed into fuel.

"As carbon dioxide fees are imposed, these thing become more and more cost-competitive," said Jennifer S. Holmgren, director of renewable energy and chemicals at UOP, a subsidiary of Honeywell that is taking on the project. "Algae, because of its ability to capture carbon, has a bigger potential than anything else for being carbon neutral."

Meanwhile, sugar producers in Brazil are arguing that the ethanol they produce should be able to be imported without the stiff tariffs it now faces. It is made from sugar cane and, they say, requires far less energy to make than corn-based ethanol. Each gallon of sugar-cane ethanol results in 10 percent as much CO2.

Some researchers think there could even be products that are carbon negative. Two papers discuss using renewable energy to displace fossil fuel and to remove carbon from the environment.

One is built on the 80-year-old technology of making liquid motor fuel from a gas consisting of hydrogen and carbon monoxide. The Nazis pioneered the technique in the 1930s, making the gas, called "synthesis gas," from coal, and some companies in the United States would like to revive it, again using coal. But the "synfuel" has more than a closet full of carbon; it produces about twice as much carbon dioxide per mile driven as ordinary oil does, counting the carbon dioxide released in production.

But synthesis gas can also be made from biomass: wood chips, corn stalks or the paper in garbage. Getting synthesis gas that way is carbon neutral, since next year's production will come from new trees or agricultural waste, which gets its carbon from the atmosphere.

At Princeton, however, Robert H. Williams, a physicist, is pushing carbon negative bioenergy, in which the carbon monoxide is burned for heat to drive the process, but the resulting carbon dioxide is captured chemically, pressurized into a liquid, and pumped underground.

If you use plants to make syngas and capture the carbon dioxide, the carbon dioxide is not a byproduct but a co-product, he said.

The invisible hand of carbon affects even building sites. Michael H. Deane, operations manager for sustainable construction at Turner Construction, said that companies building offices are looking at sites for characteristics that barely mattered before.

"You can set a building into a hillside, so you can take advantage of the existing mass of the hillside," he said. The ambient temperature of the dirt is 55 degrees, winter and summer, which can help with heating and cooling, he said. And sites are now evaluated for solar orientation and prevailing winds, both of which can heavily affect energy use, he said.

Carbon dioxide can also be invoked to try to justify other kinds of changes. In October, a San Francisco company, the Wine Group, said that heavy glass bottles took too much energy to make. The lower-carbon way, it said, was plastic bags of wine in cardboard boxes.

Bottles, the company said, were too vulnerable to "carbon criticism."

New York Times – November 7, 2007
By Matthew L. Wald

Road Home bailout tucked in defense bill

ROAD HOME/ADDITIONAL FUNDING ATTACHED TO DEFENSE BILL


$3 billion would keep program afloat longer, but hurdle looms

Washington -- House and Senate negotiators agreed Tuesday to pour an additional $3 billion into Louisiana's Road Home grant program, whose dwindling reserves threaten to shut off hurricane rebuilding grants by year's end. Appropriators tacked the money onto the fiscal 2008 spending bill for the Department of Defense, which now awaits full House and Senate action. But some doubt was cast about final passage as Senate Republicans raised concerns about the lack of financing in the bill for the war in Iraq.

Democrats want to wait until early next year to consider more money for the war in a separate bill. But Republicans are pushing for "bridge funding" in the Pentagon spending bill to ensure resources for the troops are not interrupted while a deeply divided Congress figures out how much it wants to spend on an increasingly unpopular conflict.

Despite the uncertainty, inclusion of money that covers the bulk of the shortfall in the Road Home program represented a hard-fought victory for Louisiana. Gov. Kathleen Blanco has warned for months that the grant program needs an infusion of $3.3 billion to $4 billion to cover grants for homeowners who suffered flood and wind damage in Hurricanes Katrina and Rita two years ago.

If passed and signed into law, the additional $3 billion is projected to extend the program four more months.

"It is a shot in the arm for our recovery and, with the holidays approaching, provides much-needed peace of mind to those fearing the Road Home would be closed to them," Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La., a member of the Senate Appropriations Committee, said in announcing the deal.

Landrieu credited Appropriations Committee Chairman Robert Byrd, D-W.Va., and Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., who heads the subcommittee overseeing the Community Development Block Grants, for helping to make sure the appropriation got into the final version of the bill.

The money was designated as "emergency" spending, which means that Congress doesn't need to cut somewhere else in the budget to pay for it.

Projected to run dry

Through Oct. 29, the Road Home program paid $4.3 billion in rebuilding grants to 66,314 Louisiana homeowners. With 185,895 applications in the pipeline, however, the program is projected to run out of money by the end of December or mid-January at the latest, threatening an interruption that could be a dramatic setback for the hurricane recovery.

During the past six months, Blanco has made numerous trips to Washington to lobby for more money for a program whose success she is counting on to improve a legacy tarnished during and immediately after the 2005 hurricanes.

"This money is vital to giving our citizens the resources they need to rebuild," Blanco said in a written statement. "Now is not a time for partisanship. The people of Louisiana need our delegation in Washington to stand together and fight for their people."

And a fight might be needed.

Sen. Thad Cochran, R-Miss., the top-ranking Republican on the Appropriations Committee, supported the bulk of the conference report, an aide said, but objected to the lack of financing for the troops in Iraq. The aide said Cochran would wait to see how the issue is resolved before announcing his position on the bill.

Democrats have pushed off until next year consideration of a $190 billion war spending measure offered by President Bush. Voicing skepticism they are hearing from core voters, Democratic leaders, led by those in the House, want to re-examine Bush's strategy in Iraq before approving any more money.

But Senate Republicans sounded alarms that the troops can't wait. Sen. Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, said the Army could run out of money as soon as January and the Marine Corps in March. He called for financing that could cover the troops through the spring. Senate Democrats were willing to go along with some troop money in the defense bill, according to a Democratic aide, but House Democratic negotiators refused.

An opening for Republicans?

Although the Road Home financing wasn't a major sticking point in negotiations, Republicans could use it as a basis to object to the bill if they are still dissatisfied when it hits the floor. They could lodge a procedural objection that the money is a violation of Senate rules because it wasn't in either the House- or Senate-passed versions of the defense spending bill.

Sen. David Vitter, R-La., expressed a willingness to pass the defense bill with the Road Home bailout and turn later to financing for the troops in Iraq.

"This defense bill funds the Department of Defense for the next year and provides critical funding for the Road Home shortfall that every member of the delegation has worked tirelessly to secure," Vitter said in a statement. "I hope we can pass this bill into law quickly and then move to providing the additional funding our soldiers in the field need."

Gov.-elect Bobby Jindal, who leaves his congressional seat to take over the state's top office in January, urged senators not to let a dispute about the war interfere with promised money for hurricane victims.

"I don't think it is right to use funding for one important national priority to compete with another important national priority," Jindal said. "This is important for thousands of Louisiana residents whose government made a promise to them."

Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., said he hopes to take up the bill by week's end.

President Bush has not said whether he would sign it. The president has threatened to veto eight of the 12 government spending bills, saying they are bloated. But the defense bill contains money for military personnel, weapons systems, military equipment and other provisions the president supports, suggesting that he is likely to sign it.

Another incentive is that the bill would continue current levels of government spending through Dec. 14, averting a shutdown in 10 days, when the federal government is expected to run out of money.

Shortfall would remain

The bailout doesn't plug the hole in Road Home's budget completely, suggesting that Jindal could soon be back in Washington as Louisiana governor asking for a second Road Home bailout.

The state has been asking Congress to ease the restrictions on $1.2 billion in money already appropriated to Louisiana for storm and flood mitigation. Blanco wants to use the money for Road Home instead, but FEMA has insisted it be used for mitigation, such as raising houses away from floodwaters.

FEMA recently loosened the rules so homeowners who already raised their homes can get grant money retroactively. Meanwhile, Louisiana's congressional delegation continues to push to use the money for Road Home grants.

Source: Times Picayune – November 12, 2007

MMR/SENIOR NOTES PRICED-Notes priced

McMoRan Exploration Co on Friday priced $300 million in senior notes due 2014. The senior notes have an interest rate of 11.875 percent per year. The transaction is expected to close Wednesday. The sale of the notes is expected to generate proceeds of about $292 million, which the New Orleans energy company will use to repay debt it incurred in acquiring assets from Newfield Exploration Co. earlier this year.

Source: Times Picayune

 

Sabtu, 10 November 2007

Paduan Suara YPJ Akan Tampil Di Austria

TIMIKA – "Voice of YPJ" atau Paduan Suara Yayasan Pendidikan Jayawijaya (YPJ) yang baru meraih juara pertama untuk kategori folklore (lagu-lagu rakyat) dalam festival paduan suara Asia "Asian Choir Games" di Jakarta, direncanakan akan mewakili Indonesia untuk tampil di Austria pada Juli 2008. Momen tampil di Benua Eropa itu diungkapkan Ketua YPJ Kuala Kencana, Supriono saat menyambut kedatangan ke 25 personil Paduan Suara YPJ di Bandara Mozes Kilangin ( Kamis 8/11).

Saat tiba sekitar pukul 15.30 WIT, anak-anak yang telah mengukir prestasi mengharumkan nama Kabupaten Mimika, Provinsi Papua bahkan Indonesia di kancah intemasional ini disambut Ketua Yayasan YPJ Kuala Kencana, Supriono bersama Kepala Sekolah SD YPJ Andreas Purwanto, guru dan pelajar YPJ KK, orang tua murid, serta wakil dari Pemda Mimiika, Keda Emmanuel. Murid-murid SD dan SMP menyambutnya dengan mengalungkan bunga ke leher para duta perdamaian ini, serta segenap rombongan para guru dan pendamping. Rasa haru, bahagia sekaligus bangga, memancar dari wajah mereka. Mereka mengenakan batik khas Papua. Yang menarik, rambut para pelajar putri dikepang ala Papua. Pelatih Voice of YPJ, Robert Takasengsengan tiba bersama rombongan sambil membawa piala dan medali emas yang menunjukkan timnya berhasil mengalahkan paduan suara dari 13 negara lainnya.

Acara penyambutan digelar diruang tunggu Terminal Kedatangan dipimpin Andreas Purwanto. "Kalian ini bukan lagi milik YPJ, namun milik Mimika, Papua bahkan Indonesia. Kami sangat bangga dengan hasil ini, dan ingat ini berkat kerjasama semua mulai dari guru atau murid serta orang tua semua pihak," kata Andreas. Ketua Yayasan YPJ, Supriono, dengan bangga menyampaikan penghargaan  tertingginya kepada semua anak murid dan guru serta pelatih. "Terus terang saat saya mendengar kalian juara di tingkat Asia, saya langsung menangis, namun menangis haru, sebab kalian sangat luar biasa. Ini adalah satu pertanda bahwa kalian sanggup berbuat lebih, untuk Indonesia," katanya.

Lanjut Supriono, Paduan suara, YPJ bukan saja sekedar paduan suara, tapi telah menjadi duta perdamaian, sebab ke-25 peserta berasal dari latar belakang suku, agama dan ras yang berbeda "'Ini jelas pembawa misi perdamaian," katanya, disambut tepuk tangan”. Pihaknya meminta dukungan seluruh warga Mimika, terutama dinas terkait dan Pemda. Dikatakan bahwa kegiatan semacam ini harus di dukung dalam berbagai bentuk.

 Keda Emmanuel dari Pemda Mimika juga menyatakankan rasa bangganya atas prestasi "tersebut”. "Kalau hal ini bisa diraih maka harus dipertahankan ke depan. Pemda Mimika sangat mendukung." Menurutnya, Pemda Mimika akan mendukung rencana keberangkatan ke Austria nanti. Pelatih paduan Suara YPJ, Robert Takasensengan yang ditemui RadarTimika di Bandara, mengatakan untuk tampil pada Asian Choir Games, khusus lagu-lagu rakyat (foklore) mereka mempersiapkan diri selama dua bulan. Waktu yang singkat itu dimaksimalkan. Tiga lagu daerah yang dinyanyikan, yaitu Wamare dari Suku Kamoro, Jeh Singgah dari Fakfak, dan Yako Pomane dari Asmat.

Selain harus menghafalkan lirik ketiga lagu ini, juga ditambah dengan aransemen dan koreografi. "Persaingan sangat berat baik dari dalam negeri seperti Elfas's Secioria, dari Philipina  yang mengirimkan dua tim, dan dari China, dan dari 125 paduan suara, kita menjadi yang terbaik," kata Robert, bangga. Tenyata, “kata Robert”, pilihan dewan juri adalah lagu rakyat yang benar-benar merakyat. "Elfa's sangat luar biasa, namun dari sisi aransemen lagunya terlalu ngepop, sehingga sisi lagu rakyatnya sedikit. Lagu yang kita bawakan memang belum pernah dinyanyikan sebelumnya pada 9-17 Juli 2008, kata Robert, sejak Januari nanti sudah melakukan persiapan secara matang dari semua sisi. Sebab even kali ini jauh lebih berat.

"Sebab semua pasti datang dengan yang terbaik," katanya. Disamping mencari lagu yang selalu sekali belum dipublikasikan baik melalui kaset atau yang lain, lagu pilihan juga harus benar-benar lagu rakyat. "Seperti dari Nabire dalam pembukaan, ada lagu daerah yang sangat sederhana hanya memiliki tiga melodi, naman sangat luar biasa. Musiknya sederhana namun lagu itu mendapatkan sambutan yang sangat fantastis, lagu yang demikian akan kita cari, terangnya. Selain itu, jumlah anggota paduan suara juga akan ditambah.

Alasan memilih lagu-lagu rakyat, kata Robert, karena banyak potensi lagu daerah Mimika khususnya dan Papua umumnya, yang belum digali. "Asset ini harus digali lebih dalam lagi,” katanya.

"Mimika Jangan hanya dikenal sebagai penghasilan tambang emas dan sebagainya,  potensi budaya ini harus dikembangkan. Sebagai seorang guru, saya hanya memiliki keahlian. Pemda atau pihak lain bisa diajak kerjasama untuk membina sanggar-sanggar yang ada. Saya pikir target ini yang harus kita capai, " paparnya. Robert menyarankan Pemda dan semua pihak harus benar-benar memperhatikan potensi budaya ini dengan' serius. Menurutnya, Bali memiliki potensi wisata dan budaya, sedangkan Papua memiliki lagu-lagu yang luar biasa.

Kelompok seni di kampung-kampung harus dikembangkan terus sehingga semakin berkembang.

 Indonesia dalam ajang ini berhasil menyabet tiga kategori juara, yakni PS YPJ di urutan I. dari Solo Juara II, Juara ketiga dari luar negeri, dan juara IV Elfa Secioria.

Rombongan rombongan Paduan suara dikawal Polantas Polres Mimika diarak dari Bandara menuju Kuala Kencana. Rombongan melewati depan perumahan Kuala Kencana hingga berakhir di sekolah disambut marching band SMP YPJ KK. (sas)

 

Rio Tinto Tolak Tawaran BHP Billiton US$ 350 M

MELBOURNE - BHP Billiton, perusahaan pertambangan terbesar di dunia, menawarkan proposal untuk membeli pesaingnya, Rio Tinto Group, senilai US$ 350 miliar. Namun penawaran itu ditolak Rio Tinto.

 

Dalam laporannya kepada Badan Regulator baru-baru ini, BHP mengaku telah menulis surat yang ditujukan kepada dewan direktur Rio yang isinya memaparkan rencana merger. BHP juga menulis surat lanjutan ke Rio untuk merancang suatu pertemuan.

 

Meski kabar itu membuat saham Rio menguat 25% di London, manajemen Rio dikabarkan menolak tawaran BHP.

 

"Dewan direktur Rio Tinto telah mempertimbangkan proposal itu dengan sangat hati-hati dan sampai pada kesimpulan bahwa (penawaran) itu sangat meremehkan Rio Tinto dan prospek-prospeknya. Dewan direktur mufakat menolak proposal itu demi kepentingan terbaik para pemegang saham," jelas pernyataan Rio Tinto seperti dilansir Bloomberg, Kamis (8/11).

 

Duet BHP dan Rio Tinto bakal menyaingi Cia Vale do Rio Doce Brasil sebagai pemasok bijih besi terbesar di dunia. BHP juga akan mendapat akses ke pasar tembaga yang jumlahnya mencapai 15 juta ton dan pasar alumunium sebesar 4,3 juta ton. (dna)

 

2008 Poll Budget Slashed By Govt

The government has announced it will allocate Rp 10.4 trillion (US$1.14 billion) to finance the 2009 general election, half the budget proposed by the General Elections Commission (KPU).

“The reduction is done in a spirit of efficiency,” director general of budget at the Finance Ministry, Achmad Rochjadi, told Detik.com newsportal after attending a meeting to discuss the general elections budget at the Vice Presidential Palace.

“The amount, however, is not yet final (and is) waiting for the deliberation of the bill on political parties at the House of Representatives,” he said.

In addition to Vice President Jusuf Kalla, the meeting was also attended by Home Affairs Minister Mardiyanto, Justice and Human Rights Minister Andi Mattalata, and National Development Planning Agency (Bappenas) chief Paskah Suzetta.

The KPU proposed a budget of Rp 22.3 trillion, to be taken from the state budget, and another Rp 25.6 trillion, which could be taken from regional budgets. The KPU also said the budget was for preparations and activities in 2008 and 2009.

The government provided RP 2.3 trillion from the state budget for the 2004 polls.

There were, however, additional funds allocated from the regional budget.

Achmad said efficiency efforts included the use of ballot boxes from the 2004 polls as well as increasing the number of voters at each polling station.

“We also do not need special funding for security as it is already the duty of the National Police. Maybe we only need to provide them with meals,” he said.

“Another way is using ID cards for voter identification instead of issuing a special ID for the election.”

The size of ballot papers could also be minimized and using cheaper materials similar to those used for newspapers, he said, and instead of punching through candidates’ names, voters could write down the names, thus reducing the ballot paper size.

Meanwhile, KPU chairman Abdul Hafiz Anshary said that he had yet to hear a detailed explanation of the Rp 10.4 trillion figure decided by the government.

“I don’t know yet whether that Rp 10.4 trillion is for two years or for one year only.

We will see what they mean with that figure,” said Abdul when The Jakarta Post contacted him.

However, he said, if the money was for two years then it would be irrational.

“That figure is far beyond the actual need.”

One factor behind the large budget is the increased honorarium for officials at polling stations.

“The honorarium is well below the minimum wage.

We cannot raise it with only a Rp 10.4 trillion budget. It will be a high risk to lower their honorarium.

They may possibly refuse to work or they will work but be easily tempted to violate regulations,” Abdul said.

Abdul also said the KPU and the vice president would soon form a small team including officials from the Finance Ministry, Home Affairs Ministry and Bappenas to discuss a more detailed election budget.

 

Indonesia Demands WHO Return Bird Flu Samples

The virus sample sharing deal between the Indonesian Health Ministry and the World Health Organization has been criticized after the ministry's repeated requests for the return 58 bird flu viruses have gone unanswered.

Health Minister Siti Fadi­la Supari said Thursday the ministry asked for the return of the samples three monthss ago, but had yet to receive any response.­

"We have been demanding the return of our viruses since August, but the WHO has never replied," Siti told a media conference regarding National Health Day, which falls next Monday.

Siti said Indonesia did not keep a stockpile of seed virus­es because international regulations did not allow it.

"The regulation is actually detrimental to us, because it obliges the source country to give up all its samples."

Indonesia has sent bird flu samples to the WHO since the first case of bird flu in humans was reported in 2005.

If Indonesia were allowed.d to keep the samples, it could breed the viruses and develop its own vaccines, the minister said.

"We keep asking (the WHO) to return the samples because they the belong to us. This is for the sake of our country's sov­ereignty."

Siti said there had yet to be a fair and transparent mecha­nism for sample sharing between the WHO and, source countries, and that the WHO has the authority sendd the samples to any country with­out requesting permission from the source country.

The virus, she said, could easily be delivered to research institutions worldwide. Other countries could obtain the virus for free and conduct their own research to create vaccines.

The vaccines could then be sold to others, including peo­ple in the source countries, she added.

"Indonesia is struggling to have this unfair mechanism changed through internation­al forums," Siti said.

Indonesia is scheduled to host the International Gov­ernment Meeting in Jakarta on Nov. 20. The meeting is a follow-up to the World Health Assembly meeting- in Geneva, Switzerland, in May.

During the May meeting, Indonesia proposed a new mechanismm of sample sharing among WHO members. The proposall received support from 24 countries.

Indonesia has experienced the highest number of bird flu deaths worldwide. Since the first human bird flu virus infection was detected in Indonesia in 2005, 90 people have died from infection. The deaths drew global attention and raised fears the virus could evolve into a form capa­ble of being passed between humans.