A video and photographs captured by the World Wide Fund for Nature show a dozen highly endangered tigers living within an Indonesian logging concession that could be cleared if a forest protection deal is not finalized, the group said in a statement. The Indonesian government has tentatively agreed to a two-year moratorium on new logging permits under a $1 billion deal with Norway to reduce the carbon emissions associated with deforestation, but the plan has yet to be signed into law. [Reuters]

A $100 million fund created by BP to compensate offshore workers for losses from a sharp slowdown in drilling in the Gulf of Mexico in the wake of last year’s spill has drawn little interest, the fund’s administrator says. The fund is open not just to rig workers, but nearly 30,000 workers in supporting industries yet has still drawn only a few hundred applications. As a deadline for grants approaches, the vast majority of the money could go unused. [The New Orleans Times-Picayune]

China’s output of renewable energy technologies grew by 77 percent last year, producing earnings of nearly $64 billion, more than double the total earned by the renewables sector in the United States, a new report finds. [Associated Press]