Forest & REDD
Indonesia divided over forest moratorium, misses Jan start
Wednesday, 05 January 2011 18:52    PDF Print E-mail

(Reuters) - Indonesia's government is still trying to thrash out the details of a two-year moratorium on forest clearing under a $1 billion climate deal with Norway, leading it to miss a planned January 1 start and continued uncertainty for plantation firms.

The divergence of views between different Indonesian government ministries mirrors the inability of nations to agree a concrete pact to limit global greenhouse gas emissions at U.N. talks in Cancun last month.

While the government still hopes to finalise the ban in coming weeks, the potential for further delays or a watered-down version of a much-lauded bilateral agreement would be another blow for global efforts to slow climate change.

The delay means continued uncertainty for palm oil, pulp and paper and mining firms hoping to expand.

At issue are different views on how much forest and what type of forest to include in the ban. There is also uncertainty on whether to allow holders of existing permits to clear forest to go ahead or to compensate them instead.

"We are dealing with so many stakeholders, so in a democratic process we need negotiation, discussion, compromises -- as long as the principle is still being held we are on the right track," Kuntoro Mangkusubroto, a respected technocrat who heads the president's special delivery unit, told Reuters.

The dispute shows the difficulties for Indonesia of slashing emissions while still spurring economic growth, as the country earns billions each year from cutting down forests to sell timber, paper and palm oil.

Mangkusubroto, tasked with steering the climate deal with Norway, and the forestry ministry have submitted competing drafts for the proposed moratorium, seen by Reuters, and the decision on how to proceed now rests with President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.

He has to choose between two starkly differing drafts: the forestry ministry wants the ban only on new permits to clear primary forests and peatlands for two years, while the presidential delivery unit wants it to include secondary forests, to review existing permits and consider extending the timeframe.

Primary forests are untouched while secondary forests have been selectively logged, though boundaries are often unclear and illegal logging is rampant in one of Asia's most corrupt countries. Forests soak up the main greenhouse gas carbon dioxide (CO2).

FOR PEAT'S SAKE

Peatlands emit huge quantities of greenhouse gases if drained and cleared, and heavy deforestation led the World

Bank to name Indonesia the world's third largest emitter in 2005.

Yudhoyono aims to slash 26 percent of the country's emissions by 2020 versus business-as-usual levels, or 41 percent with international support. The Norway deal, which rests on emissions cuts from saving forests being proven, was heralded as an example of how bilateral deals could help fight climate change.

Plantation and mining firms have opposed the moratorium, which could slow the expansion of firms such as Astra Agro Lestari and delay coal and mining projects worth $14 billion by the likes of BHP Billiton.

So far there are few signs that palm oil exports from the world's largest producer will be hit. Indonesia's trade minister said on Wednesday palm oil exports are expected to grow 16 percent in value this year amid new investment in the sector.

However, the draft from Mangkusubroto calls for a review on existing permit holders, though firms would be excluded if they have already invested in projects by December 2010 and the forest was heavily damaged.

Mangkusubroto said he is preparing incentives and compensation for firms such as land swaps.

"We cannot just leave them like that. We have to give them options," he said.

On the other hand, forestry minister Zulkifli Hasan, a politician from a political party allied with Yudhoyono, told

Reuters he wanted the freeze applied only to new permits to maintain business and legal certainty.

"Businesses which already hold permits can go ahead, we cannot and may not stop them, because we have exploited (the forest) for 40 years, so there are many firms who hold forest permits," Hasan said in an interview.

The ministry has identified 35 million hectares (87 million acres) of land that can be used selectively for business, and nine plantation firms have submitted requests to use 320,000 hectares of forest.

He added the ban will still protect 43.8 million hectares of primary forests and half of the 20 million hectares of

peatlands, while applying sustainable forest management practices to another 48.5 million hectares.

"This is already January 2011 and after seven months of discourses and reviews in the public and within the government, the government is yet to produce a clear strategy and legal framework," said Fitrian Ardiansyah, forest climate policy analyst at WWF.

(By Olivia Rondonuwu; Additional reporting by Chris White; Writing by Neil Chatterjee; Editing by David Fogarty)

© Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters

Source: Reuters

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A victory for climate and the world’s forests
Tuesday, 28 December 2010 14:05    PDF Print E-mail

In sharp contrast to widespread predictions of failure, the recently concluded Cancun meetings captured a new spirit of thinking about sustainable development and efforts to combat climate change.

This is how the game is changing: Officials, NGOs and experts meeting at Cancun are pushing a practical agenda forward.

The delegates meeting in Cancun agreed to stronger language on reductions commitments and a new global fund to help developing countries with mitigation and adaptation efforts, including-capacity building for national monitoring, mapping, financing and readiness systems to better monitor and support local efforts.

Important for Indonesia, delegates also acknowledged the important role curbing deforestation must play in meeting the global climate change challenge and offered new support for a set of programs and activities collectively referred to as REDD (Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation).

Delegates were clear that reducing deforestation-related emissions does not mean reducing growth or lowering development aspirations. Just the opposite.

But it is little surprise that some chose to confuse this picture. Alan Oxley, an Australian consultant to palm oil companies, wrote in The Jakarta Post on Dec. 15 that Indonesia didn’t need to worry about reducing emissions from deforestation, on the basis of a single new study that suggests that clearing forests is a less important source of global carbon emissions than earlier estimates.

On that basis, Oxley criticizes President Susilo Bambang Yudho-yono’s commitment to reduce GHG (Greenhouse Gas) emissions caused by deforestation and his intention to suspend for two years the issuance of new licenses for clearing primary forests and cultivating carbon-rich peatlands.

Oxley’s criticism is misguided in multiple ways. We do not know if the study considers Indonesia’s national emissions, or indeed any emissions from tropical peat soils, one of the most important sources of emissions from land-use change in Indonesia.

“The good news from Cancun allows us to move forward with REDD+, cutting carbon emissions, slowing deforestation and promoting biodiversity.”

In any case, what may be an overestimation at an aggregated, global level does not necessarily demonstrate an overestimation in any particular country.

Furthermore, Oxley has deliberately blurred the distinction between estimates of our so-called “business as usual” emissions trajectory and our actual achievements in recent years in combating deforestation, forest fires and peatland degradation.

That Indonesia’s rate of deforestation is declining, as reported by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations, demonstrates the seriousness of the Indonesian government in reducing its emissions on voluntary basis rather than, as Oxley contends, that reducing deforestation is unnecessary.

Most importantly, it is incorrect to assume that Indonesian decision-makers respond only to international pressure or global estimates of GHG emissions.

Indonesia has learned the hard way the costs of unsustainable development, not only in monetary terms but also from the loss of lives and damage to well-being from flash floods, uncontrolled fires, landslides, droughts, loss of watersheds and other eco-disasters.

President Yudhoyono has made a commitment to reverse the unsustainable practices of years past and place Indonesia on a track toward a more secure and sustainable development approach.

The four-track strategy of the current administration, namely “pro-poor, pro-job, pro-growth and pro-environment”, has been translated into national development targets as well as selected priority implementation programs.

Preventing forest fires and wanton destruction of forests for private gain will improve public health on a vast scale, will protect crops and plantations as well as forests, will provide jobs to forest communities, as well as helping to reduce the carbon emissions that come from such disastrous events.

Smallholder palm oil growers can benefit from utilizing degraded lands, such as alang-alang, because the lands have been cleared by timber companies who obtained licenses under false pretenses.

Oxley claims that the two-year moratorium on clearing primary forest lands is a move against development. In our consultations with the private sector, community groups, NGOs and local governments, no companies have raised objections to the idea of a moratorium.

Responsible businesses understand the value of proper enforcement of existing regulations, rationalizing the permitting process, better spatial planning, easier and more secure access to already degraded land, and more transparent and credible databases for land titles and concession licenses.

The moratorium will provide some breathing room for the government to pursue each of these objectives.

The only ones who have something to fear from improved enforcement, better information and more transparency are those who have built their business by undermining the government through bribery and money politics, through illegal activity and lack of transparency.

Oxley’s campaign for continuing the unsustainable practice of clear-cutting our remaining primary forest and to fan opposition to the two-year moratorium is no doubt welcomed by the unscrupulous business entities.

The government has strong commitment to allow expansion of plantations, mining and other economic activities in already degraded forest areas. New policies and incentives are also on the table for those who would like to turn unproductive grasslands into high-yielding, productive assets.

The good news from Cancun allows us to move forward with REDD+, cutting carbon emissions, slowing deforestation and promoting biodiversity while simultaneously combating poverty and ensuring economic development. Success in capturing these multiple goals will require the steady and collaborative involvement of all of us: government, business and civil society. (By Agus Purnomo)

The writer is President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s special assistant on climate change.

Source: The Jakarta Post

Some rights for the image is reserved under Creative Commons license

Last Updated ( Thursday, 30 December 2010 09:26 )
 
Climate talks set to agree deal to save the forests
Saturday, 11 December 2010 17:59    PDF Print E-mail

Nothing, as they say at UN conferences, is agreed until everything is agreed. But as the climate conference in Cancún runs into its final hours, delegates are confident that at least something has been salvaged from the diplomatic wreckage.

A text laying out an agreed framework for sending billions of dollars a year to tropical countries so they can protect their forests has been agreed in working groups and only has to pass the all-powerful plenary, where over 190 nations must give it the final stamp of approval.

The scheme, known as Reduced Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD), was held up by disputes over safeguards designed to protect biodiversity and the rights of forest dwellers, including indigenous tribes. Brazil, in particular, is said to have fretted that the wording of the text infringed their sovereignty.

Conservationists and defenders of human rights appeared confident the REDD text would be approved by the plenary and claimed a victory, though a lot of detail has still to be worked out. "We have some good material banked, and we can now move on to more detail," said John Lanchbery of Birdlife International.

However, one major issue on REDD is unresolved. Some nations, headed by Bolivia, want the funds for REDD to come from governments alone, while others such see money from corporations buying carbon offsets as the main driver for the scheme. Bolivia says this would be tantamount to "selling mother nature". Delegates have so far only agreed to postpone that decision for another day.

Postponed to Durban

Elsewhere progress has been slower. The conference is likely to postpone decisions on a number of crucial issues left over from Copenhagen to the next summit – in Durban, South Africa, in November 2011.

They include the future of the Kyoto Protocol – the only framework currently on offer for legally binding emissions targets for nations. With Japan, Canada and, from Thursday, Russia saying they will not accept new targets after the existing ones expire in 2012, the survival of the protocol hangs by a thread. Most developing nations would not accept any deal that did not include a renewal of the protocol.

Brazil's chief negotiator Luiz Figueiredo told journalists that delegates are likely to agree only to continue negotiations on an agreement that would avoid a lapse after the existing rules expire in 2012.

Campaigners were pleased to see the "gigatonne gap" between emissions pledges made so far and the cuts needed to keep the world below 2 °C of warming specifically addressed. The agreement is likely to "urge parties to address the gap".

That might not look like much of an advance. But for European governments, for whom recognition of the gap has in recent days become a key negotiating demand, it represents success. As Lanchbery, a veteran of many such conferences noted, "American negotiators can go home with nothing achieved and it doesn't matter politically. But Europeans have to be able to take something, however small, home and claim to have made progress."

In the bizarre world of climate diplomacy, increasingly adrift from the recommendations of scientists, such wording counts as a victory. (By Fred Pearce )

Source: NewScientist

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 28 December 2010 14:04 )
 
Brazil takes cautious steps on REDD
Wednesday, 08 December 2010 18:11    PDF Print E-mail

Forest issues have taken the stage in the ongoing climate change talks in Cancun, Mexico. The conference is expected to develop an agreement on REDD (reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation) that will become the legal basis for forested nations to implement the plan for emission reductions in order to mitigate global warming. The Jakarta Post’s Adianto P. Simamora interviewed Brazil’s lead negotiator for REDD affairs, Thelma Krug, on what Brazil, the nation with the world’s largest rainforest, has done to prepare for the implementation of REDD. Below is an excerpt.

Question: What is the status of REDD-plus pilot projects in Brazil?

Answer: We are still creating a national strategy for REDD, which means we are developing what could constitute an institutional arrangement, with broad participation by civil society, business people and indigenous people. We want their voices heard.

We have also discussed the distribution of financial benefits and learned about the implications and difficulties. We here in Brazil have discussed how the plan can become a comprehensive mechanism that could be adapted to Brazil.

Even if the Cancun talks come up with REDD rules, Brazil wants to have its own regulations that would fit into regulations made in multilateral agreements, but would also make specifications for the country.

In benefit sharing, we don’t know exactly how it would be distributed. We don’t have clear idea yet. We are still thinking about that carefully, with the participation of civil society, locals and indigenous groups.

We expect the benefits should be part of resources that need to implement monitoring tools for the verification of emissions cuts.

Some state governments in Brazil have been discussing benefit sharing within their own states, but this would only apply in their respective areas, not to all of Brazil.

In Brazil, we also don’t call them REDD pilot projects. They are “self-labored” REDD projects because the federal government has not formally recognized the pilot project yet.

What would be your strategy for REDD implementation?

Brazil doesn’t see REDD being implemented through project-based mechanisms because we think REDD is a mechanism related to forms of more sustainable development change. The project-based approach would not lead us to that.

With project-based mechanisms, we can have a project here and another project somewhere else, but they would never make up a picture of REDD at the national level. What is necessary in Brazil’s vision is to have a national framework based on a national approach, so we know exactly where we want to go and how to get there.

The national approach to forests is necessary in order to provide ideas on how to get to REDD’s objective to maintain carbon stocks in forests and reduce emissions from deforestation.

Could you explain a little bit about the Amazon Fund?

The Amazon is the largest forest in Brazil. But it has not been developed through a national approach. The Amazon Fund was coordinated by the Development Bank of Brazil, not the federal government.

The deforestation rate in the Amazon continues to decrease. It is currently at 6,000 kilometers compared to more than 20,000 kilometers five years ago.

This reflects federal government policies like a tight monitoring system, fiscal policies and law enforcement.

We are now expanding the monitoring system to other forests in Brazil.

One condition that Brazil demands of donors providing money to the Amazon Fund is that their projects never generate certified emission reductions or any carbon trading.

We have made it clear since the beginning that all money given to the Amazon Fund should be voluntary contributions. So, there is absolutely no offsetting with any carbon reduction achieved through the Amazon Fund.

The government of Norway has promised US$1 billion to the Amazon Fund, but Norway can’t use it to offset its emissions.

Brazil has sovereignty to use the money from the fund, as the fund should be guided by several committees that have been put in place that involve the participation of civil society, NGOs, academics and researchers. They provide guidance as to how the money should be used.

Could you explain the latest progress of REDD in the group of G77?

We have had very little opportunity for success here, but I think the proposal of the chair on REDD must be very good.

We don’t want that (other sector) to benefit from the mechanism. We have to propose another carbon strategy for other sectors such as the energy, waste and industry sectors. We want REDD-plus to be about forest issues.

Source: The Jakarta Post

Copyright © 2008 The Jakarta Post - PT Bina Media Tenggara. All Rights Reserved.

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Indonesia's Billion-Dollar Climate Experiment
Wednesday, 08 December 2010 17:53    PDF Print E-mail

Can rich nations pay a corruption-riddled government to protect its rainforests?

On a humid afternoon in Sungai Tohor, a coastal village in Sumatra's Riau province, 50 or so men are packed into a town-hall conference room. They sit in neat rows of blue plastic chairs, many clad in knee-high rubber boots, loose-fitting polo shirts, and baggy pants—the casual uniform of an Indonesian farmer. Women and children peer in through open windows and doors. There's excitement in the air, thanks to a gaggle of visiting journalists and enviros who have come to discuss the fate of the village—and a way of life now under siege.

Over multiple generations, residents of Sungai Tohor have built a thriving trade network that has brought them relative prosperity. Each month, they ship several hundred tons of sago paste—a starchy dietary staple produced from trees they cultivate in the jungle—to Malaysia and Java. The proceeds have enabled them to buy bright new motorbikes, build quaint homes, and maintain a slow-paced lifestyle that prioritizes family and community above all else. Some families can even send their children to college.

Last year, however, Indonesia's Ministry of Forestry told PT LUM—a supplier for the Singapore-based pulp-and-paper giant APRIL—that it could cut down nearly 26,000 acres of lush rainforest surrounding Sungai Tohor and replace it with acacia trees, used to make paper products. The proposed plantation overlaps with the sago groves and other areas that the villagers use to grow rubber and coconuts.

Among the town-hall speakers is Kaka, a slender, ponytailed man who works as an organizer for the Indonesian environmental group WALHI. As he explains it, Indonesia is accepting cash from Western governments to protect its rainforests even as it enables outside corporations to destroy them. Back in May, in exchange for $1 billion from Norway, Indonesia's president agreed to place a two-year moratorium on new logging permits. In theory, his administration is also supposed to work closely with locals to develop sustainable forestry practices—such as Sungai Tohor's sago trade. But government officials have yet to address the villagers' formal complaints.

The Norway deal is part of a broader United Nations program with an insufferably wonky title—Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation—that aims to tackle climate change by paying developing countries to preserve their forests. Because the destruction of rainforests and their carbon-rich peat soils releases vast quantities of CO2 into the atmosphere, and because the payoffs seem like a relatively cheap and straightforward fix, REDD is likely to be one of the hottest negotiation items at the current round of climate talks in Cancun, Mexico. Among the major sticking points: What, exactly, constitutes a forest? (Logging interests argue that their plantations should qualify.) And how much say will forest communities like Sungai Tohor have in the process?

Back at the town hall, Nong, a gregarious sago mill owner, stands to speak his piece. "If this company comes in," he says, "the sago groves will be destroyed and we will lose our way of life. Soon they will clear the trees and plant acacia. We will then lose the animals—the deer, the pigs." He looks over at the foreigners. "We ask you to help us to keep our village, our food supply, our livelihoods." He takes his seat amid murmurs of agreement and nodding heads.

The village secretary rises in turn to remind everyone what happened in 2003, when PT LUM received a similar logging concession nearby. The residents "rejected them in a harsh way," vandalizing equipment and setting up security camps to protect areas they claimed as their own. When the government sent in troops to assist the company, the men grew infuriated. They marched to the house of their kepala desa (chief)—who had taken the company's side—and burned it to the ground.

The new kepala desa stands with the villagers.

Indonesia is an attractive target for international climate-change efforts, because it boasts the third-largest expanse of tropical rainforest on the planet, and one of the most biodiverse—its emerald-green jungles are home to iconic endangered mammals like Sumatran tigers, elephants, rhinos, and orangutans. Some 30 million Indonesians also rely on the forests for subsistence, taking wood to build homes and boats, and animals to eat.

More to the point, Indonesia is the world's third-largest emitter of greenhouse gases, second only to the United States and China. The overwhelming majority—85 percent—of those emissions result directly from the conversion of jungle to agriculture. Since 1990, companies like APRIL and Sinar Mas have cleared nearly 91,000 square miles of mature Indonesian rainforest—an area larger than Minnesota—and planted acacia and a variety of palm whose oil is used in everything from breakfast cereals to cosmetics to biofuels.

Worldwide, this sort of land conversion generates more greenhouse gases than the entire global transportation sector, which is why wealthy nations, including the United States, are now handing over cash to curb the destruction. Much of the $4.5 billion pledged thus far is destined for Indonesia, where President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono (Indonesians call him "SBY") has vowed to cut overall emissions 26 percent by 2020—or more, provided the cash keeps coming.

That, however, would constitute a complete turnaround in Indonesia's forest policy. For one thing, SBY recently pledged to increase acacia and palm-oil production even while curbing deforestation, a seemingly contradictory goal; for another, the government has for decades handed out huge logging concessions to firms with close ties to "the military and state elites," says Christopher Barr, a forest policy expert with the U.S.-based consulting firm Woods & Wayside International. He adds that "corruption is widespread at all levels within the sector," and powerful interests "have often displaced rural communities that have managed these resources for generations."

Following the town-hall meeting, I'm whisked away on the back of a moped along a narrow, cracking concrete path—what passes for a road in these parts. I dismount in front of a single-story wood home where I've arranged to chat privately with Kaka and Alfian, the current kepala desa. Or not so privately, as it turns out: Alfian's living room is like an auxiliary town hall, with dozens of villagers coming and going during our conversation—rushing to greet their chief with handshakes and smiles. Alfian, clad in a plaid shirt and neat black slacks, returns the good will, offering each man his hand and attentive gaze.

Even before Kaka got involved, Sungai Tohor had partnered with other villages under threat from paper companies and collected 30,000 signatures on a petition protesting the concessions—which WALHI helped distribute to regional and federal officials. He hands over a thick stack of paper that includes the signatures, along with arguments detailing why the concessions are illegal and how they will destroy the local economy.

Some 60 percent of the targeted area, Kaka explains, is by law the villagers' customary land. In addition to the sago areas, he says, PT LUM is preparing to clear areas of untouched rainforest that the company and the ministry falsely claim are "degraded." (In a new report, Greenpeace warns of precisely such a ploy by paper and palm oil interests aiming to expand by rebranding their activities as land "rehabilitation.") Already the company has cut a clearing just outside the village boundary, where it has dug several 20-foot-wide canals through the thick peat soils—another legal violation, he adds.

The canals, Kaka explains, are meant to drain the peat—acacias prefer dry soil—and to create a waterway that can be used to transport cut trees to the pulping mill. As the soil dries, so too will the sago trees, which thrive in the moist soil. "There's already a drop in the water table," Alfian says, based on his last excursion into the forest.

Kaka and Alfian suspect that PT LUM bribed government officials to secure the concession—this, they believe, is why the Ministry of Forestry has yet to review their petition. I ask the men whether, in the absence of a federal review of the permits, the villagers are prepared to confront the company as they did back in 2003. They turn toward one another, eyes wide. "We're going to try to make sure that doesn't happen," Alfian responds. "We don't want to use anarchistic or violent methods. We want to use democratic means."

After leaving Alfian's, I go visit some sago mills on the village outskirts, where man-made structures give way to a lush wall of Sumatran rainforest. The harvested logs are floated here from deep in the forest by way of a slow-moving river that runs adjacent to the row of mills.

I watch a man strip dry brown bark from the logs with slow, deliberate heaves of an ax. Another worker, a cigarette dangling from his lips, chops the stripped logs into wedges, which are then fed into a pulping machine—its motor chuffing like a riverboat stuck in mud. The pulpy ivory-colored mass pours out of a rubber hose at the base of the machine and into a long rectangular pool where the starch is separated from the wood fibers. Next to the bath, dozens of sacks of sago paste stand upright and ready to ship. Surrounding each mill are piles of bark to be burned for fuel or used to make floors or fences.

Over at his mill, Nong, who is 66 but could pass for mid-40s, becomes animated when he talks about the setup. Rather than simply harvesting logs for prosperous mill owners, the farmers grow, process, and sell the paste themselves—paying mill owners a small sum for use of their machinery. "That way," Nong says, "even families with only a few logs are still able to produce their own sago."

Now that their economy is under threat, villagers are warily looking to the Norway pact for a strategic opening. The petition Kaka showed me plays up the role of forests and peatlands in mitigating climate change, and some farmers told me they were developing proposals for how REDD funds could be used to improve sago production. "We will support the government's program," Alfian explains, "but only if it goes to saving the forests."

That remains to be seen, of course. In late October, Wandojo Siswanto, formerly a top climate-change negotiator and architect of the Norway pact, was arrested and charged with accepting a $10,000 bribe to grant a company's no-bid contract with the forest ministry. Siswanto told reporters that he was simply obeying ministry orders, a claim the government denied.

The buck now stops with Kuntoro Mangkusubroto, an SBY confidant whom the president has put in charge of implementing the Norway deal. Kuntoro enjoys a clean reputation, having supervised a $7 billion donor fund as head of post-tsunami reconstruction in hard-hit Aceh province. "We are now fighting very hard to have a country with high integrity," Kuntoro told me. With "REDD and reconstruction in Aceh, we've proven that when it comes to starting from zero, we can design something different than what we had before."

His definition of success is simple: lower emissions. But when I asked whether the government would reconsider concessions such as the one near Sungai Tohor, Kuntoro turned vague. "It all depends on where the concession is," he said. "We are going to limit development on peat land; there are a number of factors that we have to consider before making a decision to review or not to review." He would not elaborate.

PT LUM has yet to start clearing around Sungai Tohor in earnest. But unless the government does step in, there's nothing to stop it from doing so. The company has doled out work to villagers here and there, but nothing that would make up for loss of their sago. Standing in the clearing alongside one of PT LUM's canals, farmer Numun Daya grips his machete. "It was 1903 that my ancestors first opened land here. When I think of that time, I think of the hardship for them," he says. "We have lost 13 areas of sago, and there is only a tiny bit of work from the logging company. We still have six more sago areas in danger.

"With those fields," the farmer adds, "we have a future." (By Robert Eshelman)

This piece was reported as part of the Climate Desk collaboration. The writer also received support from the Investigative Fund at the Nation Institute.

Source: Slate

© Copyright 2010 Washington Post.Newsweek Interactive Co. LLC

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