http://www.theage.com.au/world/sumatra-burns-in-palm-oil-rush-20120704-21hch.html

Sumatra burns in palm oil rush 
Michael Bachelard
July 5, 2012 
  a.. 
 
Clearance: Fires in the Tripa peat forest in Aceh. The destruction poses a new 
threat to rare orang-utans. Photo: AFP

THE carbon-rich peat forests of northern Sumatra are burning again as palm oil 
companies break Indonesian law to clear the land for their plantations.

Environmental groups have warned that the local population of critically 
endangered orang-utans are ''doomed'' unless the fires are stopped.

And smoke from the burning is at times engulfing cities in Malaysia and 
Thailand, prompting doctors in Kuala Lumpur to warn people with respiratory 
problems to wear masks.


 
Bleak future: Sumatran orang-utans are critically endangered. Photo: Jason South

Photos from the Tripa peat forest in Aceh show widespread burning, which the 
Indonesian environment ministry's head investigator, Syarifudin Akbar, 
estimates now covers almost 2000 hectares.

''This is a criminal case because the law says it's a crime to open a land by 
burning,'' Mr Akbar said.

Environmentalists say the fires were lit by palm oil companies and threaten 
about 200 orang-utans in the area - one of the densest populations in the world.

More than 3000 of the great apes once lived in the area being cleared. Now just 
7000 survive on the whole island of Sumatra, which has been hit in recent years 
with uncontrolled clearing of primary forests for palm oil plantations.

The latest fires were picked up by satellites last week and confirmed by field 
staff working for environmental groups.

The environment department, the national police and the government's REDD task 
force are investigating.

A spokesman for the task force, Achmad Santosa, agreed the forest burning was 
''an issue of law enforcement'' and ''exactly the job of the REDD task force, 
that is to ensure the enforcement of the law''.

The head of the REDD task force, Kuntoro, visited Aceh yesterday to speak to 
the Governor and check the situation.

But Kamaruddin, a lawyer for the Tripa community, said the various 
investigations under way were ''proving to be too little too late'' and called 
for President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono to intervene.

''These companies simply have to be ordered to stop [clearing] immediately and 
that order to be strictly enforced, otherwise the peat forests and inhabitants 
of Tripa will be lost forever,'' he said. Dr Yudhoyono has won global plaudits 
for saying ''deforestation is a thing of the past'' and that ''losing our 
tropical rainforests would constitute the ultimate national, global and 
planetary disaster''.

But that has not stopped the annual ''burning season'' of forests in Borneo and 
Sumatra as companies take advantage of dry weather to prepare the ground for 
new plantations.

''Despite all these words and statements and speeches about conserving 
orang-utans and peat lands and reducing carbon emissions … the evidence is 
there has been no change,'' said Dr Ian Singleton of the Sumatran Orang-utan 
Conservation Program.

Part of the area being burned is owned by palm oil company PT Kallista Alam, 
which was granted a concession now under challenge in the Indonesian courts. 
Former Aceh governor Irwandi Yusuf said he granted the concession as a wake-up 
call to the international community over its inaction on a carbon pricing 
mechanism in Indonesian forests. However, a company spokesman said it had 
nothing to do with the fire, which had blown into its area from a neighbouring 
site. The owner of that land, PT Agro Maju Raya, could not be contacted.


Read more: 
http://www.theage.com.au/world/sumatra-burns-in-palm-oil-rush-20120704-21hch.html#ixzz1zmrK2w1M


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