Bagaimana dengan US$ 1 miliar yang diberikan oleh Norwegia dan Us$ 300 juta  
dari Perancis juta untuk mencegah deforestation? Apakah masih ada ataukah sudah 
 habis ditelan rayap penguasa? 

http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2011/feb/09/pal-oil-giant-most-valuable-indonesian-rainforest

Palm oil giant vows to spare most valuable Indonesian rainforest
Golden Agri-Resources - the world's second highest palm oil producer - bows to 
pressure from the west


Fiona Harvey 
guardian.co.uk, Wednesday 9 February 2011 11.26 GMT 
Article history
 

The West Kalimantan province of Borneo, Indonesia. Greenpeace has said it will 
monitor Golden Agri-Resources to ensure it keeps to its promise. Photograph: 
Romeo Gacad/AFP/Getty Images 
The world's second biggest palm oil company has agreed to halt deforestation in 
valuable areas of Indonesian forest, bowing to pressure from western food 
processors and conservationists.

Golden Agri-Resources Limited has committed itself to protecting forests and 
peatlands with a high level of biodiversity, or which provide major carbon 
sinks, as part of an agreement with conservation group the Forest Trust.

However, the agreement announced on Wednesday will still leave GAR free to 
exploit other areas of forest, and land that is judged to be of lower 
conservation value.

Greenpeace, which has strongly criticised GAR in the past for its alleged 
destructive activities, is expected to keep a close watch on the company to 
ensure it lives up to its promises. Bustar Maitar, head of Greenpeace's 
campaign to protect Indonesian forests, said: "This could be good news for the 
forests, endangered species like the orangutan and for the Indonesian economy.

"On paper, the new commitments from Golden Agri are a major step towards ending 
their involvement in deforestation. And if they do make these changes, large 
areas of forests will be saved. But now they've actually got to implement these 
plans, and we're watching closely to make sure this happens."

Scott Poynton, executive director of the Forest Trust, a Geneva-based 
not-for-profit organisation that helps companies improve their environmental 
sustainability, added: "Today's agreement represents a revolutionary moment in 
the drive to conserve forests.

"It's about going to the root causes of deforestation - we have shown that the 
destruction of forests is anchored deeply in the supply chains of the products 
we consume in industrialised nations, and we are showing we can do something 
about that."

He said pressure from Nestlé, which last year drew up a set of sustainability 
guidelines and signalled that it would not accept palm oil from sources 
connected to deforestation, had been instrumental in bringing GAR to the table.

Franky Wijaya, chief executive of GAR, said: "As a leading player in the palm 
oil industry, we are committed to playing our role in conserving Indonesia's 
forests and look forward to working with all stakeholders including the 
government of Indonesia, other key players in the palm oil industry, NGOs and 
local communities to find the common ground for sustainable palm oil production.

"Our partnership with the Forest Trust allows us to grow palm oil in ways that 
conserve forests and that also respond to Indonesia's development needs, 
creating much needed employment while building shareholder value."

GAR, which has annual revenues of $2.3bn, is the biggest palm oil company in 
Indonesia - the world's biggest palm oil producing country. The oil is used in 
an ever-increasing variety of consumer products, from cosmetics to biscuits, 
generating a market worth $20bn a year. These rewards have driven the clearance 
of large areas of tropical forest to make way for the plantations.

Under the agreement, GAR will not use areas of forest and peatland that are 
classified as "high conservation value" or as "high carbon stock", meaning they 
store large amounts of carbon and should be preserved. However, the definitions 
of these terms have not yet been precisely set. Poynton said an initial aerial 
assessment of forest cover had set out "go" and "no-go" areas, with GAR free to 
exploit the former. The "no-go" areas will be reassessed to find whether they 
should be regarded as valuable.

Experts in Indonesia will be asked to judge whether GAR forests have "high 
conservation value" under guidance from the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil, 
a coalition of the palm oil industry and conservation groups.

The agreement also fell short of setting out how much land GAR may use for new 
palm planting.

Poynton said that if the agreement was successful, it could help turn Indonesia 
into a role model for sustainable development. Indonesia has played a strong 
role in international climate change negotiations, since hosting the Bali 
conference in 2007.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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