Updated: December 13, 2016 2:41 AM ET | Originally
published: December 1, 2016
Brake lights illuminate a mound of spiny palm fruits
lying beside a road outside Tesso Nilo National Park on the Indonesian island
of Sumatra. Laborers are spearing them and heaving them onto the bed of a truck
when two farmers approach.
“Sure, we’re growing oil palm in the national park, so
what?” one of them shouts at TIME. “Foreigners always come and cause problems.
If you were from an environmental organization, we would’ve smashed your car.
And then you’re lucky. In the next village they would’ve killed you!”
At the moment, the threats are just that. A few months
earlier, a team of forest-crime investigators stripped a nearby village before
they were chased away with sticks. In August, locals detained officials
investigating a fire and threatened to kill them. But the area is tense, and
actual violence may only be a matter of time.
More trees are being felled in
Indonesia than in any other country — most of them to create room for palm
plantations. Palm oil is used for the world’s processed food, cosmetics
and, increasingly,
in biodiesel industries. But producing it involves clearing vast tracts of
forest by burning. In 2015, flames consumed a
combined area roughly the size of Massachusetts. In five months, the
fires emitted more
greenhouse gases than Japan or Germany do in a year; destroying orangutan and
tiger habitats. The epic fires, by creating a choking annual smog that drifts
across the region, may have also caused the early deaths of an estimated 100,000
people across Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore.
Wetter weather this year — compared with the tinderbox
conditions created by the El Nino phenomenon in 2015 — provided some relief.
Burning in many provinces occurred at only a fraction of 2015 levels, and damp
vegetation meant that fewer fires burned out of control. But at the same time,
relying on something as changeable as the weather is no strategy at all.
“We have to be realistic about change,” Rolf Skar,
forest campaign director at Greenpeace USA, tells TIME. “There’s no magic
wand.”
In central Sumatra’s Riau province — the heart of
what has rapidly become the country’s primary export earner — the
problems of deforestation are made plain. To find the natural rainforest that
once covered the province, you need to drive for at least three hours from the
airport to Tesso Nilo National Park, one of the most biodiverse lowland forests
in the world. Or perhaps it was, given that half of the forest cover has been
lost since 2000.
“Every time we go on patrol we find illegal loggers,”
says Ruswanto, head of Flying Squad, a WWF-sponsored group monitoring the park.
“We would at least need four teams to patrol all of their entrances into the
forest.”
Confrontations are testy. The Flying Squad classifies
local villages as red, yellow or green, depending on their hostility, and
reports logging violations to park management — but the park’s armed rangers do
not always respond immediately, allowing most perpetrators to get away.
The encroachment shows no signs of abating. Earlier
this year, an investigation revealed
that palm oil from the park ends up in products labeled as sustainable in the
West. And a report by Amnesty International released Wednesday documented
labor abuses at plantations in Indonesia that allegedly supply palm oil to
global brands.
Asian Agri, the owner of the local mill, claims that
it cuts contact with farmers in breach of logging rules. But a Edy, the farmer
who threatened TIME, says the mill only refused his fruit for a week.
In a letter to TIME, Asian Agri strongly denied any
wrongdoing and emphasized its commitment to sustainable practices. It said that
it did not tolerate “illegal FFB” — using the industry abbreviation for “fresh
fruit bunches” — and said that it was implementing “full FFB
traceability” in conjunction with an NGO, Setara Jambi.
When persuaded to talk, Edy said “We want to protect
the forest too, but we need to survive.” He claimed that plantation companies
have taken over his village’s land. “No one brings any solutions. They only
shoot at us when they see us in the forest.”
It’s easy to pick on small-time farmers like Edy. The
big players reportedly responsible for the lion’s share of Riau’s approximately 2
million hectares of illegal plantations — unregistered plots owned by people
with influence — are more difficult to handle.
“Of 513 palm oil companies in Riau, 378 don’t have a
valid license,” alleges Made Ali, deputy coordinator of Jikalahari, a coalition
of local environment groups. “They are owned by 20 people with connections to,
and protection from, political parties.”
There has been some accountability — in 2014, Riau’s
governor was jailed for 14 years,
in part for improper handling of forest permits — but there has been little
actual change.
Commuters drive
through thick haze in Tumbang Nusa, Central Kalimantan, on Oct. 25, 2015.
Ba Ismoyo—AFP/Getty Images
Since last year’s fires, Jakarta has launched a string
of initiatives. The national anticorruption agency is zeroing in
on affected provinces like Riau. District officials have been told they will
lose their jobs if they are unable to control fires. Law enforcers have doubled the
number of people arrested in connection with forest fires. An agency has been
created to monitor and restore destroyed peatlands. (Drained for cultivation,
these areas can burn several meters underground, making them the chief contributor
to the seasonal haze that blankets this part of Southeast Asia.) President Joko
“Jokowi” Widodo has also promised to issue a new moratorium on further
deforestation before year’s end.
“If translated properly into law, this could be a game
changer,” says Arief Wijaya, climate-and-forests associate of the environmental
organization World Resources Institute (WRI).
Hopes are best kept tempered. The last moratorium,
from 2011, did not cover the vast amount of forest that companies had already
been approved to clear. Neither were violations subject to criminal punishment.
More drastic measures face opposition from those within the administration
who claim that
a comprehensive ban on deforestation would hurt the vital palm oil industry.
But last year’s fires cost Indonesia
at least $16 billion — almost as much as its annual palm oil exports, and
double the cost of damage and losses from the 2004 tsunami. If Indonesia is
successful in curbing its CO2 emissions, the country could even expect an
inflow of funds. Norway, for one, has promised $1 billion as part of the U.N.
initiative REDD+. (An equivalent pledge to Brazil in 2008 accelerated a
precipitous drop in deforestation of the Amazon.)
“As soon as the moratoriums are implemented, we are
ready to release our funds,” Vidar Helgesen, the Norwegian Minister of
Environment, tells TIME.
For proper implementation, improved law enforcement is
crucial. A dozen companies have been taken to court for involvement in the 2015
fires, but only one was found guilty. Activists on the ground report an unwillingness by
police to advance cases, because evidence collection is difficult. This feeds a
climate of impunity, and is aggravating relations with neighboring countries.
Singapore is hit with debilitating haze every year. In 2015, air pollution
reached hazardous levels, closing schools and costing the city-state an
estimated $517 million in
economic losses. It spawned the campaign We Breathe What We Buy,
which led to supermarkets banning Indonesian agribusiness products.
As the financial center of the region — and hub for
many of the agribusiness conglomerates — Singapore’s signals carry weight. In
July, Indonesia’s pulp-and-paper giant APP, which has been targeted by
Singaporean campaigns, announced a
$20 million investment in fire prevention and monitoring. This year, fires in
its concessions reportedly dropped greatly.
Smoke rises from a
forest fire in this aerial photograph taken in Ogan Komering Ilir, South
Sumatra province Indonesia, on Oct. 30, 2015
Dimas Ardian—Bloomberg/Getty Images
“It’s too early to say, but a number of companies
facing prosecution under [Singapore’s] Transboundary Haze Act have become very
cautious,” Susan Minnemeyer, director of WRI’s program Global Forest Watch,
tells TIME.
Technology is playing increasingly important role in
monitoring the fires. Global Forest Watch has developed a satellite model that
is used by the Singapore government, mapping out land types, concession rights
and fire hot spots. With it, the city-state and others are able to track the
direction and origin of smoke plumes. In August, a group of NGOs used satellite
imagery to pin a
South Korean company to the burning of 50,000 hectares of virgin rainforest in
the eastern provinces in Papua region and Maluku Islands.
At the same time, connecting the data with specific
companies can be tricky. Land permits have been handled in such a haphazard way
that authorities use several competing maps. Reconciling them has proven hard.
“The technology is there,” Greenpeace’s Skar tells
TIME. “But there are elements within the government that benefit from status
quo.”
There are other problems that need to be solved. Vast
deforested tracts are still officially labeled state forest. Changing their
designation could improve their management.
Hundreds of land disputes also need to be settled.
Many hark back decades, to a government scheme to alleviate poverty and boost
agribusiness. The scheme peaked in the 1980s when millions of poor people were
moved from overpopulated areas of the archipelago to the scantily populated
forests, where they were assisted to start and manage commercial plantations.
Land rights of locals, especially indigenous people,
were often ignored or sidestepped. The development has pushed most Orang Rimba,
an ethnic group on Sumatra whose name literally means the “people of the
forest,” to a life of poverty in remote areas.
“The people from Java came here and gave my parents
rice and cassava, and asked them to move to another part of the jungle,”
Nggilo, chief of an Orang Rimba tribe in Jambi province, tells TIME.
“It feels like we’ve been murdered in our own homes.”
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