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The fight for a forest paradise
  Date  September 7, 2013 
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Michael Bachelard
Indonesia correspondent for Fairfax Media


Can ecotourism save the orang-utans?
The global demand for palm oil drives deforestation in Indonesia, but can 
ecotourism save Indonesia's rainforests and its inhabitants? Michael Bachelard 
reports.

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Sumatra is the only place on earth where orang-utans, tigers, elephants and 
rhinoceros are found together. But it may not be so for much longer. Now, only 
remnant populations of each survive as their habitat is cleared for yet more 
plantations, and by illegal loggers.

Driving through North Sumatra, on rutted roads from dawn to dusk, you see 
little else but oil palm trees in ordered rows and dozens of trucks, their 
precious kernels piled high.

Arriving at Tangkahan comes as a relief. This tiny village sits across the 
river from the Gunung Leuser National Park, where the landscape is how it used 
to be - a jungle so tangled even walking through it would seem impossible.

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Sumatra wildlife
Tourists interact with the elephants in Tangkahan, North Sumatra. Photo: 
Michael Bachelard

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But even the national park is not entirely safe and, in search of food, animals 
regularly stray into the plantations and gardens of villagers. At the jungle's 
edge, elephants are in danger of being poisoned - five have died in the 
neighbouring province of Aceh in the past six weeks, their young taken as pets 
or left to die.

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In Tangkahan a desperate rearguard action is taking place. It's home to the 
seven Sumatran elephants housed by a non-government organisation, the 
Conservation Response Unit. The animals act as the main attraction of an 
ecotourism venture. Tourists spend a few days in the jungle, watching the 
elephants up close, washing them, feeding them and riding them into remote 
waterfalls and hot springs at the jungle's edge.

With its concrete huts and open-sided cafe, cold-water bucket showers and 
limited electricity, Tangkahan is at the purist end of ecotourism.

 
An orangutan in Bukit Lawang. Photo: Michael Bachelard

Half a day's drive away, also in North Sumatra, Bukit Lawang is at the opposite 
end of the spectrum. Since the 1970s, it has sold tourists on the idea of 
watching orang-utans swinging through their jungle home.

Thousands turn up every month to fully appointed hotels, and the riverside town 
has grown so popular that pollution, development and noise are growing. Now, 
some of the orang-utans are exhibiting signs of dangerous aggression.

Between these two extremes lies a series of questions. Can ecotourism ever 
out-compete the $30,000 per hectare that palm oil earns the Indonesian economy? 
And can it help save the island's forests and their unique animal inhabitants?

 
Ngalemi Sinuraya, leader in the village of Batukatak. Photo: Michael Bachelard

Since 1974, John Purba has been patrolling the area now called the Gunung 
Leuser park, which straddles North Sumatra and Aceh in Indonesia's far west. 
He's a park ranger but so poorly paid that he is forced to subcontract himself 
out as a tour guide ''to feed my family, pay for school for my children''.

Purba is well trained and experienced, and he's been working for years to 
convince the local people that they should help conserve this last redoubt of 
rainforest and the animals who live here.

''I tell the local people that money from tourism is good money. I say that is 
why I always need help from the local people to protect the forest,'' he says.

Most villagers here - landowners or not - make a living by harvesting oil 
kernels or tending the remains of the rubber plantations which predated them. 
Others grow fruit and vegetables, or cut trees down illegally and sell them by 
the piece. Stray too far from Bukit Lawang itself, and the idea that wild 
animals are anything more than a pest or a danger is a relatively new one, 
Purba says.

''I tell them European people like to come to Indonesia because of the 
orang-utans. Some people are surprised about that.''

Dinan lives in Tangkahan, which started out as a logging town. As a schoolboy, 
he felled trees and floated them down the river to market. He also recalls 
being paid by entrepreneurs to take cattle into the jungle to feed.

Now he works as a guide. He has learnt English and earned enough money from 
tourism to build a house overlooking the river and the jungle. He feels guilty 
about his earlier life and, with the passion of a convert, is trying to sell 
others on the idea.

In a nearby village where ''they still have illegal logging'', though, he 
recently ran into trouble. ''We said to them, 'You must try, you must keep the 
views good in your place - good for trekking, good for sleeping in the 
jungle','' Dinan says. ''But they were aggressive. It's hard to convince 
Indonesian people that tourism can bring money.''

Agung Kacaribu and his young crew take little convincing. They run the catering 
at the little, riverside restaurant in Tangkahan, shyly speaking to tourists, 
practising their English, and extolling the virtues of a healthy forest.

Agung wants to be a diplomat - a job he would no doubt never have contemplated 
without the input of foreigners. Meanwhile, he and local girls Lisa and Dewi 
Pusfitasari educate Westerners in traditional cooking styles.

But it's a tiny operation. The elephants, all refugees from the jungle, 
continue to require donor funding as part of a complex economic model that's 
not entirely settled.

Bukit Lawang, by contrast, is big business. It's billed as ecotourism, but the 
hotels are airconditioned and have hot, running water. There are dozens of 
restaurants, backpacker joints and even a shopping centre of sorts. The rubbish 
runs slightly less freely in the rivers than in other parts of Indonesia, but 
during my visit, nothing stopped the ear-splitting Indonesian pop music that 
played half the night.

Sonya Prosser, the marketing manager of Australian ecotourism outfit Raw 
Wildlife Encounters, says Tangkahan has not yet benefited the community enough, 
and Bukit Lawang is so big it's in danger of damaging the environment.

Here, unregistered and untrained local ''guides'' hand-feed orang-utans, 
wanting to guarantee their customers an encounter, but also risking the 
transmission of deadly diseases such as tuberculosis. Orang-utans are now 
showing behavioural problems and it has been suggested that one animal, Mina, 
be moved further into the forest after becoming aggressive - though she could 
easily return.

''This kind of thing is going to increase until somebody gets injured,'' 
Prosser says. ''There are 200 registered rangers and guides, some of whom are 
not well trained, then you've got illegal ones as well. There are perhaps 300 
all up.''

Prosser says Bukit Lawang long since made the transition from ecotourism to 
mass tourism, and the animals are paying the price. Indonesia is still full of 
wild places and astonishing beauty, despite deforestation and environmental 
degradation. But, apart from Bali, it makes little effort to invite foreigners 
to see it, or to train Indonesians to show it.

At an official level it's all about managing natural resources; ecotourism is 
barely a blip on the radar. The tourism ministry in Jakarta referred us through 
five different offices on the hunt for some expertise. Last stop was the office 
for market development, which had figures on culinary tourism, golf tourism, 
diving tourism, even religious tourism, but nothing at all on ecotourism.

Non-government organisation the Indonesia Eco-Tourism Network also has no 
detailed figures, but says the sector is growing - the Tanjung Puting National 
Park in Borneo grew by 60 per cent last year. But spokeswoman Wita Simatupang 
says the industry cannot grow too fast, and the biggest handbrake is poor 
training and bad infrastructure.

About 90 minutes by motorbike down hopelessly rugged roads from Bukit Lawang is 
the untouched village of Batukatak, perched on the banks of the stunning 
Berkail river. Maybe 70 families live here - about 210 people - surviving on 
the earnings from rubber extraction and palm oil. The village doesn't even have 
a nasi goreng stall and the locals still gape openly when a ''bule'' (white 
person) rides in. But the nearby jungle does have truly wild orang-utans and 
elephants. Even a tiger comes to a spectacular nearby cave - full of 
stalactites and stalagmites - to give birth to her cubs. Purba hopes that this 
village will be the location of a new ecotourism venture.

''At the moment it's a stable village,'' Purba says. Asked to explain he says: 
''It means not all have enough to eat.''

Local leader Ngalemi Sinuraya says his neighbours ''know already that Western 
people like animals and like to save them''.

''It means if we save the forest completely, the animals will be healthy,'' he 
adds. And ecotourism? ''We'd like it. We'd really like it,'' the men gathered 
around him nodding in furious agreement over their cups of gritty Sumatran 
coffee. ''They'd like to be more advanced in the village,'' says Purba. ''If 
ecotourism comes here maybe all the people can have an income; maybe they can 
fry the bananas that visitors can buy.''

But according to Prosser, if Raw Wildlife or any other developer were to 
operate in Batukatak, it would need to be a product of high value - the chance 
to see and help preserve forest and animals that can be seen nowhere else. 
What's needed, she says, is ''fewer and more high-quality punters, who are 
prepared to pay a lot for a unique experience''.

In a developing country like Indonesia, with a social and physical 
infrastructure that is naive at best, it's a tough ask. ''But in the end 
there's only one way ecotourism can work to save the forests: the animals have 
to outvalue the palm oil.'


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