http://www.smh.com.au/environment/forests-of-corruption-20120609-202ri.html

Forests of corruption 
Michael Bachelard
June 10, 2012
As the public servants of Indonesia's Forestry Ministry stand waiting for the 
lifts, they are assailed by warnings against graft.

"Stop bribes, corruption," says a large sign on level three. "We officers of 
the Ministry of Forestry are anti-bribes," asserts another.

It would seem patronising if it were not so necessary.

"The forestry sector," said Chandra Hamzah, the deputy chairman of Indonesia's 
Corruption Eradication Commission, in 2010, "is a source of unlimited 
corruption."

The department earns $15 billion a year in revenue from selling forestry 
permits and the investors with the deepest pockets are those who want to log 
forests or turn them into plantations. The illegal trade in logging and forest 
concessions, fuelled by bribes, cronyism and corruption, is invisible but 
probably many times larger.

On climate change, Indonesia is being pulled in two directions. Politically it 
appears serious about the task of reducing its emissions, 60 to 80 per cent of 
which are due to deforestation. The President, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, has 
pledged to reduce emissions by 26 per cent without international help, and by 
41 per cent if such help is forthcoming.

But economically, the drivers of deforestation have not changed. There is big 
foreign cash to be earned as a coal and timber producer and the world's largest 
exporter of palm oil.

Into this messy context five years ago walked an experienced environment 
project investor, the American Todd Lemons, wanting to establish a Reducing 
Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation (REDD) scheme to sell carbon 
credits to the world.

By July 2010, Lemons had jumped 11 of the 12 hurdles mandated by the Indonesian 
bureaucracy, spending $2 million in the process. He believed his 90,000-hectare 
Rimba Raya project on Kalimantan would be the first to sell carbon credits from 
Indonesia into the world market. Rimba Raya was intended to produce 100 million 
tonnes of credits over its 30-year life and he had forward contacts in place 
with the Russian gas company Gazprom to buy them. All he needed was the 
forestry minister's approval.

But on the verge of success, he was informed the ministry had halved the size 
of Rimba Raya, making it unviable. The rest of the land was signed over to a 
palm oil company, PT Best Group.

The project went into limbo, and, almost two years later, there it remains. 
Lemons and his business partners declined to comment in detail because they are 
still waiting for final word from the government. But in a short email, he was 
scathing: "Indonesia continues on the same path where their actions don't match 
their words. At the higher levels … they continue to charm the world and 
solicit foreign taxpayer money to fund their 'feasibility studies'.

"Meanwhile, their forestry department continues to hand out permits to palm oil 
and continues to be an obstructionist to REDD projects, particularly 
foreign-owned REDD projects."

It is understood in business circles in Indonesia that Rimba Raya fell foul of 
nationalist sentiment by announcing the deal with Gazprom too early.

Hadi Daryanto, the quixotic secretary-general of the forestry ministry, told 
The Sun-Herald that Rimba Raya was just "a big noise".

"They were here from Singapore, [asking], 'Why you kill the Rimba Raya?' I 
don't kill. They are stupid. They don't have the licence when they go to 
market."

Despite the government's support for REDD projects, private schemes in 
Indonesia have fallen by the wayside. Many of those surviving are run by the 
public sector, including Australia, but even these are foundering. The flagship 
program, the Kalimantan Forests and Climate Partnership, set up with money 
pledged in 2007 by John Howard, has been "quietly but drastically scaled back", 
according to a report from the Australian National University. The area now 
being worked on is just over 10 per cent of the original target and the 
Australian Department of Climate Change concedes that getting the support of 
local people has been difficult.

Norway has also come into Indonesia with $1 billion to try to fix its 
institutional problems. So far, those problems are so deep, the Nordic country 
has only been able to disburse $30 million of its money.

Money-makers such as Macquarie Bank and Merrill Lynch-Bank of America have not 
given up. Macquarie's Brer Adams is armed with a $25 million fund, "BioCarbon" 
and is hunting for REDD projects in Indonesia, and Merrill Lynch's Abyd Karmali 
said he was still keen to develop "instruments" to allow his clients to invest 
in REDD.

But the most prospective private REDD project is run by an Indonesian company, 
PT Rimba Makmur Utama. At the helm is Dharsono Hartono, an Indonesian who 
admits he is "crazy" to attempt it.

Born in Indonesia but educated at the US Ivy League university Cornell and a 
10-year veteran of international banks in New York, Hartono has the credentials 
to navigate the tangle of bureaucracy, nationalism and corruption that is 
Indonesia. But even he has been trying for five years to get through the 
approvals process.

"To be successful in REDD you need time," he said. "At the moment the market 
[for REDD credits] is uncertain, the regulation is uncertain, the initial cost 
is high. You'd have to be crazy to do it."

Hartono's concession covers 200,000 hectares of forest in central Kalimantan, 
home to perhaps 4000 of the world's remaining 60,000 orang-utans. Just one 
hurdle remains - approval from the minister. It's the hurdle that tripped Rimba 
Raya and Todd Lemons. Hartono hopes to clear it, but he is not counting his 
chickens.

"I have to be realistic. I understand risk. If I'm not successful, I will have 
to cut my losses. The next 12 to 24 months will be a good test."

Whatever new climate change institutions have been set up in Indonesia, the 
real power still resides with the old, powerful economic ministries such as 
forestry.

Hadi Daryanto, the forestry department's secretary-general, says he is 
supportive of REDD.

In an interview with The Sun-Herald, he likens carbon to electricity - 
invisible, but a saleable commodity nonetheless. Daryanto also knows exactly 
how to calculate its economic value. Leaping to his feet and going to a nearby 
whiteboard, he sketches it out.

"If REDD is to happen, then the solution is about the payment for environmental 
services and the price of the carbon compared with the logs," he says.

"Logs are priced in the market at $US100 per cubic metre of log. It would have 
to be $US70 per tonne of carbon to compete.''

Australia's carbon tax will pay just one-third of this amount from July 1, and 
the European market is paying about one-seventh.

"Who will pay?" asks Daryanto. "If the price is below the [price of a] log, 
nobody wants to sell. They just cut the trees … It is a question of economics, 
not a question of conservation."


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