http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/news/top-indonesia-official-throws-weight-behind-keeping-forest-clearing-ban/566806

Top Indonesia Official Throws Weight Behind Keeping Forest Clearing Ban
January 21, 2013

 A view of cleared land designated for a palm oil plantation in Pelalawan, Riau 
province, Indonesia, on this Aug. 10, 2010 file photo. Norway entered a 
partnership with Indonesia to support Indonesia's efforts to reduce emissions 
from deforestation and degradation of forests and peat lands. (Bloomberg 
Photo/Dimas Ardian). 
Indonesia, home to the world's third-largest expanse of tropical forests, 
should resist pressure from the powerful palm oil industry and extend a ban on 
forest clearing by one or two years, an influential government official said. 

Southeast Asia's largest economy is under international pressure to curb 
deforestation and destruction of its carbon-rich peatlands, which the palm oil 
and mining sectors say is hindering economic growth. 

Indonesia imposed a two-year moratorium on clearing forest in May 2011 under a 
$1 billion climate deal with Norway aimed at reducing emissions from 
deforestation, and the government has yet to announce what it plans to do about 
the ban.
 
"From my perspective, I've proposed to the president to extend," said Kuntoro 
Mangkusubroto, a technocrat who oversees forestry sector reform and heads a 
presidential delivery unit aimed at cutting through red tape. 

"It is good that we can extend for another year, maybe two."

"I'm happy with the results so far," he said in an interview. 

"It is still not perfect but at least we are close. We've achieved a lot, 
although I'm not totally satisfied." 

The moratorium, which covers 65 million hectares or about a third of Indonesia, 
is part of a climate change deal signed with Norway in 2010, although officials 
said only $28-29 million of the $30 million disbursed so far has been used. 

"I'm a fairly conservative person when it comes to utilizing funds," he added. 

"I know the environment, the bureaucracy, the problem in the areas ... I have 
to be very prudent." 

Kuntoro is known for being able to get policy implemented in a country where 
stifling bureaucracy and corruption often blunt efforts to reform. 

The former Indonesian energy and mines minister was credited with being the 
architect of the rebuilding of Aceh after the province was devastated by a 
tsunami in 2004. 

No decision on whether to change, extend or scrap the forest moratorium had 
been made, and Kuntoro said the president was unlikely to make a final decision 
before May. 

Increase Palm Yields, Not Acreage

Indonesia is the world's biggest producer of palm oil, with estates sprawling 
across around 8.5 million hectares and expected to rise by about 200,000 
hectares a year for the next decade. 

The agriculture minister says the forest ban should be replaced with a stricter 
permit criteria for plantations, while palm firms want it scrapped because they 
say it casts Indonesia's management of plantations in a bad light. 

"If the objective is to increase the production of palm oil, you can easily 
reach that without extension of the acreage," Kuntoro, who also heads a task 
force on Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation (REDD+) said. 

"You can improve productivity." 

Last week, the Indonesian forestry ministry said the moratorium should be 
extended, and urged palm firms to instead expand on the almost 24 million 
hectares of degraded forest land. Green groups see the moratorium as a positive 
step, but some activists are critical of the concessions to the palm industry. 

Norway has said Indonesia's progress in reforming its forestry sector will not 
be sufficient to meet its pledge to reduce carbon emissions by 26 percent by 
2020. 

"[Norway] are very enthusiastic — they understand the complexity of having this 
program in Indonesia," Kuntoro said, ruling out any chance of the deal Norway 
falling through. 

Reuters

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