Greenpeace Calls for Moratorium on Logging
Ulma Haryanto & Arti Ekawati | January 07, 2010
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351329I think illegal logging is nothing next to legal logging and the current push for palm oil plantations. I'm glad I'm not an orang utan.
Simon: surely Mr. Hasan doesn't have that kind of foresight. By then, it will another minister's problem, not his.
I would say the problem also lies on illegal loggings. The problem with the Forestry Ministry (as with other institutions here) is that it has weak rules enforcement.
Slam the moratorium now, illegal logging will rise, leaving the forests still harmed and the honest (I'm hoping there's still some) workers without a source of income. Slam the moratorium later, it'll already be too late.
We lose either way :(.
'But Forestry Minister Zulkifli Hasan said Greenpeace’s call for a moratorium was impossible.
“What should we do with our industry? Can [Greenpeace] provide any solutions for the logging industry and people who make their living from forestry sector?” the minister said on Wednesday.'
--and when all the forests are gone (in under a decades time by most estimates)? What kind of living will they be making then from the sector? You're banging your head against a brick wall Greenpeace. Zulkifli Hasan is just the latest in a long line of avaricious fools stretching back to Bob Hasan. Surely it's his job to provide the solutions. Stick to the guerilla tactics GP.
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Save the environment or lose up to $7 billion a year in revenue — as
well as tens of thousands of jobs — from the forestry sector?
For
environmental group Greenpeace, the answer is simple: Implement a
moratorium on logging this year to allow the government time to clean
up its act, and give the environment a breather from rampant
deforestation. But the Forestry Ministry says the country cannot afford
to do so.
“A logging moratorium means taking a break from
logging activities, and by this we mean all logging activities,” Bustar
Maitar, a Greenpeace Southeast Asia campaigner, told the Jakarta Globe
on Wednesday. “While the country is taking a break from logging
activities, the government should check any overlapping laws between
central regulations and regional application, which conflict most of
the time.”
During the hiatus, Bustar said the government could
also look for nonforest areas in which plantations and production
forests (HPI) could be developed.
Peatland forest conversion
for development contributed 40 percent of the country’s greenhouse gas
emissions, he said. “So why don’t they use empty areas for these
plantations and HPI?”
According to Bustar, other deforestation
activities, such as logging, contributed an additional 40 percent to
the country’s carbon emissions.
“A logging moratorium and
putting a stop to peatland [conversion] and deforestation should be
included in the 2010 national roadmap to reach the country’s emission
reduction targets,” he said, referring to the government’s commitment
to a 26 percent reduction in carbon emissions by 2020.
But Forestry Minister Zulkifli Hasan said Greenpeace’s call for a moratorium was impossible.
“What
should we do with our industry? Can [Greenpeace] provide any solutions
for the logging industry and people who make their living from forestry
sector?” the minister said on Wednesday.
According to
Zulkifli, the moratorium would cause economic stagnation. Besides, he
said, the country already had programs in place for sustainable
forestry management.
“If we want to blame somebody because of deforestation, blame the illegal loggers and their buyers,” he added.
Nanang
Roffandi Ahmad, executive director of the Indonesian Forest
Concessionaires Association (APHI), said the logging moratorium was not
the right solution to reduce carbon emissions because it would have a
negative multiplier effect if there was not any proper forestry
management activity.
“The forestry sector contributed about $7
billion a year to the state income, with pulp industries contributing
some 50 percent,” he has said previously. “If it was stopped, the
country would lose significant income.”
Nanang said the
government should also think about the workers who earned their livings
from forestry activities, right down to those who transported the
logged products.
“On average, there are more than 40,000
employees at forestry companies and we pay them about $3 a day. If
there was a logging moratorium, how would these employee live?” he
said.
Greenomics Indonesia, a nongovernmental organization
that assesses the economic impact of the environment, had previously
released data showing that a moratorium would cost the country at least
Rp 75.24 trillion ($8.13 billion) from economic losses over the next
eight years.
Elfian Effendi, executive director of Greenomics,
said a moratorium needed to be supported by developed countries in the
form of funds to compensate for the restrictions on the forestry
sector.
At present, there are 187 companies holding forestry
concessions. Of those, 110 firms have rights to log natural-growth
forests, which have a potential value of Rp 65.96 trillion to 2018; and
77 companies have rights to log HPIs, which have a potential value of
Rp 9.28 trillion to 2018.
“In total, the country needs to
cover Rp 75.24 trillion, which must be paid by [international] donors
and other developed countries as compensation for protecting our forest
from exploitation,” Elfian said.
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