http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/30/science/earth/30climate.html?_r=1&adxnnl=1&ref=asia&pagewanted=all&adxnnlx=1259863217-cPSFMLcJXYlvzCV86pAs6A

The Road to Copenhagen 
Tree Harvester Offers to Save Indonesian Forest 
 
Kemal Jufri/Imaji, for The New York Times
Amiruddin, a fishermen from Teluk Meranti village, and his family paddled up a 
creek in a dugout canoe. "I can tell the peat land's leaking because the water 
here is getting browner and more acidic," said Amiruddin, 31, who, like many 
Indonesians, uses only one name. More Photos > 

By NORIMITSU ONISHI
Published: November 29, 2009 
TELUK MERANTI, Indonesia - From the air, the Kampar Peninsula in Indonesia 
stretches for mile after mile in dense scrub and trees. One of the world's 
largest peat swamp forests, it is also one of its biggest vaults of carbon 
dioxide, a source of potentially lucrative currency as world governments 
struggle to hammer out a global climate treaty. The vault, though, is leaking.

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The Road to Copenhagen
An Industrial Solution 
This article is part of a series about issues that will face world leaders when 
they meet in Copenhagen in December to forge a new global accord on climate 
change.

Previous Article in the Series » 
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A Plan to Save a Forest From an Unlikely Source 
Map 
Kampar Peninsuala Forest 
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Times Topics: Copenhagen Climate Talks (UNFCC)
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Kemal Jufri/Imaji, for The New York Times
A giant paper and pulp company, Asia Pacific Resources International Limited, 
or April, says it wants to create a ring of industrial tree plantations around 
the the Kampar Peninsula's core to preserve it. More Photos » 

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Canals - used legally and illegally - extend from surrounding rivers nearly 
into the peninsula's impenetrable core. By slowly draining and drying the peat 
land, they are releasing carbon dioxide, contributing to making Indonesia the 
world's third biggest emitter of greenhouse gases, after China and the United 
States.

The leaks were evident to a family of fishermen from this village, just south 
of the peninsula, as they paddled up a creek in a dugout canoe.

"I can tell the peat land's leaking because the water here is getting browner 
and more acidic," said Amiruddin, 31, who like many Indonesians uses only one 
name, as his wife, Delima, 29, scooped up the creek's coffee-colored water to 
drink.

Forests like the one on the Kampar Peninsula are at the center of a growing 
battle over the shape of a new climate treaty and efforts to curb the 
destruction and degradation of forests. Though countries are expected to reach 
only a broad agreement at next month's summit meeting in Copenhagen, 
governments, scientists, businesses and environmentalists are already arguing 
over what kinds of forests should qualify as carbon reducers and what kinds of 
projects should be rewarded financially.

The arguments over the Kampar have become particularly heated, not just because 
of its ecological importance, but because, so far, the most detailed plan to 
stop the leaks from the peat land comes from an unlikely source: a giant paper 
and pulp company that, according to its critics, has been one of the driving 
forces of deforestation in Indonesia. The company, Asia Pacific Resources 
International Limited, or April, says it wants to create a ring of industrial 
tree plantations around the peninsula's core to preserve it.

What is more, it hopes to receive carbon credits for doing so under a United 
Nations program to reward nations for conserving forests and reforesting 
degraded ones. The program, Reducing Emissions From Deforestation and Forest 
Degradation, or REDD, is expected to be part of a new climate treaty. Unlike 
the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, a new treaty is expected to tackle deforestation, 
which alone accounts for 20 percent of the world's greenhouse gas emissions. 
Halting deforestation in tropical forest nations like Indonesia and Brazil, the 
world's fourth biggest emitter, is considered crucial to reining in global 
warming.

Developing nations that preserve forests would be paid with carbon credits that 
they could sell to industrialized nations seeking to meet emissions reduction 
targets. Though the program's specifics will probably take months or years to 
be worked out, more than a dozen projects of the United Nations program are 
already under way in Indonesia, backed by such diverse entities as conservation 
groups, the Australian government and Merrill Lynch, in addition to paper and 
pulp companies.

Environmental groups say the paper and pulp companies, after years of 
despoiling Indonesia, should not be rewarded under the program.

"They are the ones that did the damage," said Michael Stuewe, an expert on 
Indonesia at the World Wildlife Fund. "Now they're saying: 'We were bad boys. 
Now we're good. So give us the money.' "

The companies argue that the United Nations program could provide them with the 
financial incentives to preserve forests even as they expand their operations, 
a goal supported by the Indonesian government, which sees the paper and pulp 
industry as a mainstay of the country's economic development. 

"We could perhaps reduce the annual Indonesian emissions by 5 percent with this 
one project," said Jouko Virta, April's president of global fiber supply, 
referring to the company's plan to ring the peninsula's core. "It's so 
significant. One project."

Everyone agrees, at least, on the importance of saving the Kampar Peninsula, a 
nearly one-million-acre peat bog on the equator inhabited by Sumatran tigers, 
bears, monkeys, crocodiles and other wildlife.

Most of the peninsula remains free of humans, though small fishing camps can be 
found up its creeks. More significantly, illegal loggers can be seen operating 
in bases set up along some canals and creeks. And east of here, near a village 
called Pulau Muda, more than a dozen houses flank a long canal jutting into the 
peninsula, in what appears to be the biggest human settlement on the Kampar.

Made up of decomposed trees and plants, sometimes as deep as 50 feet, the 
waterlogged land stores billions of tons of carbon dioxide. But once drained or 
cleared, the peat land releases many times more carbon dioxide than the 
deforestation of rain forests. Most experts believe that, as with rain forests, 
the protection of peat swamp forests will be eligible for carbon credits under 
the United Nations program.

The Kampar Peninsula is one of the last tracts of green left in central 
Sumatra, where forests have been cleared to make way for palm oil plantations 
and industrial tree plantations, especially those belonging to April and its 
chief rival, Asia Pulp and Paper, both owned by Indonesian conglomerates. 
According to the World Wildlife Fund, here in Riau, the province where the two 
companies have their main mills and plantations, two-thirds of the area's 
forests have disappeared in the past quarter century.

Illegal loggers have also clear-cut vast chunks of forest. Migrants often slash 
and burn land for farming, sometimes inside national parks; like people 
elsewhere in Indonesia, they are often encouraged by local governments seeking 
to populate areas for economic or political reasons, in defiance of officials 
from the understaffed Forestry Ministry.

April, which, with its partners, has government-issued concessions across a 
third of Kampar, says its ring of acacia plantations around the core will block 
off any such encroachment, though it says it needs to acquire more land to 
complete the circle. On plantations already in operation, the company uses a 
sophisticated network of canals and dams that minimizes leakage from the peat 
land, environmental groups acknowledge.

If April acquired control over the core, it could be paid for protecting it. 
The company says it believes that it can be, at the very least, rewarded for 
the ring, about half of which would be turned into acacia plantations and half 
left as natural forests or what it calls "conservation areas."

"The carbon we are storing in the conservation areas could be financed through 
REDD," Mr. Virta said in an interview at April's 4,300-acre mill, about two 
hours west of here by car.

Agus Purnomo, who leads the government's National Council on Climate Change, 
said it would take months or years of negotiations after next month's climate 
conference to determine whether April's ring would be entitled to carbon 
credits.

Much will depend on whether an agreement includes stipulations against the 
conversion of natural forests into industrial tree plantations. Indonesia, like 
other countries with paper and pulp industries, counts industrial tree 
plantations as forests. 

Environmental groups caution against any project of the United Nations program 
involving the conversion of natural forests into industrial tree plantations. 
Bill Barclay, policy director at the Rainforest Action Network, said the 
priority in Indonesia should be to "halt further conversion of natural forests" 
and "further draining of peat lands."

But that kind of argument finds little traction in a nation with an economy 
that is still developing.

Mr. Purnomo, of the country's climate change council, said government officials 
were worried that Indonesia's ranking as the world's third biggest emitter of 
greenhouse gases would increase pressure to reduce emissions.

"Are we going to remain underdeveloped because of that?" he asked.

Since starting operations on a new concession near here in September, April has 
brought jobs to Teluk Meranti. As part of its community outreach, it has 
brought a new generator to increase the supply of electricity and construction 
material to renovate two mosques. Still, Teluk Meranti had yet to buy April's 
vision of the future. Villagers remained overwhelmingly opposed to the 
company's presence here, opponents and supporters of the company said.

"We don't know what we'll get," said Firdaus, a 39-year-old man operating a 
makeshift convenience store. "What rights do we have?"

He was unaware of April's ring project. But, yes, he had heard of the 
importance of peat from environmental groups. "We were told," he said, "to 
protect the peat for the climate."



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