Refleksi : Tak usah buru-buru melarang pembabatan hutan. Biar saja  bagi yang 
nau tebang atau menggundul hutan, silahkan, mongggo-monggo dan pliiiiisss 
apabila kantong penguasa perlu diisi menjadi gemuk buncit. Pokoknya  $1 miliar  
dari Norwegia, $ 300,-- juta dari Perancis dan $ 250,-- juta dari Australaia 
untuk rehabilitasi hutan sudah nongkrong di bank agar  bunganya bisa ditimbun. 
Apakah akan dipakai untuk rehabilitasi  hutan masih belum waktunya untuk 
dibicarakan guna dicairkan. Kita ramai-ramai doakan agar insyaalloh uang ini 
tidak dimakan rayap penguasa karena membusuk. Hehehehe

http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3128&Itemid=226


Indonesia Delaying Deforestation Ban 

Written by Angela Dewan    
Thursday, 14 April 2011 
 
Time is running out Corporate lobbying, including Tea Party meddling in 
Washington, slows moratorium promise 

When Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono announced last May that his 
country would halt deforestation for two years starting Jan. 1, he was poised 
to become the green superhero of the developing world.

But fierce corporate lobbying, some of it from an offshoot of the right-wing 
Tea Party in the US, has been Yudhoyono's kryptonite, delaying the moratorium 
by more than three months.

Under an international scheme called Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and 
Forest Degradation (REDD+), Norway pledged $1 billion to Indonesia to stop 
issuing new permits to log its forests, in which billions of tons of carbon are 
stored. The scheme aims to monetize carbon stocks locked in forests, preventing 
their release into the atmosphere and thereby mitigating climate change.

Yudhoyono now sits powerless at his desk, tapping his pen, waiting for a draft 
decree - being drafted without public input - to sign. Without it, the 
moratorium has no legal basis.

But there may be some cause for optimism. Kuntoro Mangkusubroto, one of the few 
genuine reformers among the country's political elite and the head of the REDD+ 
Task Force drafting the decree, told Asia Sentinel that major corporate players 
were showing support for the decree and that he hoped the law would be ready 
within two weeks.

He named Indonesian paper and palm oil giant Sinar Mas as the lobbyists' 
"leader of the pack".

"There has been very encouraging progress lately with big companies like Sinar 
Mas, which said a month ago that it would comply with the REDD+ agreement," 
Kuntoro said.

"That's a real encouraging step... When the big ones comply and say they want 
to follow, usually the others will also follow."

But what those terms and conditions are have not been made public. Contrary to 
Kuntoro's statement, Sinar Mas claims that it was never against the moratorium 
and declined to comment further on the issue.

After years of intense campaigning by Greenpeace against Sinar Mas, the brand 
won points with environmentalists when its $2.3 billion palm oil arm, Golden 
Agri Resources, agreed in February to stop destroying carbon-rich forests, 
pledging to only log forestland with 35 tons or less of carbon per hectare, in 
other words, degraded land.

While Sinar Mas' commitment was welcomed by its critics, a recent report in the 
New York Times raised suspicions that Sinar Mas could still be lobbying against 
the moratorium through clandestine avenues, including the use of a lobby group 
disguised as an arm of the US Tea Party movement that opposes government 
regulations and most environmental efforts, including even the existence of 
global climate change.

The report, "Institute for Liberty: Tea Party Group With Business Agenda," 
detailed efforts by a Tea Party affiliate, the Institute for Liberty, to oppose 
tariffs on Indonesian products from Asia Pulp & Paper, a Sinar Mas subsidiary. 
It equated the tariffs with violations of American freedom. The article linked 
the group and Asia Pulp & Paper to the lobbying efforts of former Australian 
diplomat Alan Oxley's World Growth International, which advocates lowering 
restrictions on Sinar Mas and other palm oil and paper interests in Indonesia 
and elsewhere. 

World Growth, which fancies itself a grass-roots NGO working on behalf of the 
poor worldwide to promote economic growth, denied that companies under the 
Sinar Mas brand had funded the organization. Under US law, however, as a 
non-profit organization it is not obliged to disclose its financial backers.

Elfian Effendi, Director of Greenomics Indonesia, said that World Growth's work 
was dubious, in particular a report released on March 31 claiming the REDD 
would cost Indonesia jobs and "harm biodiversity."

"The figures conveyed by World Growth are unrealistic. They say that the 
moratorium or REDD+ implementation will cost Indonesia 3.5 million jobs 
annually. That figure is baseless. What we can do here in Indonesia is avoid 
the government trusting their figures," Elfian said.

But Nur Masripatin, director of the Center for Standardization and Environment 
at the Forestry Ministry, said on Wednesday that the government was taking 
World Growth's report seriously.

"We think it's good to get all perspectives on this," Nur said.

The ministry's use of the World Growth report has activists worried, prompting 
calls for greater transparency of the entire process of drafting the decree. 
Past drafts have only been made public through leaked documents.

What everyone, from conservationists to investors, want to know is how the 
government will define the term "forest." The Letter of Intent between Norway 
and Indonesia states that all peatland and natural forests should be protected 
in the ban. But debate continues over whether secondary forests will be 
included.

By scientific definition, secondary forests are those that have been cleared of 
much of their original vegetation and have trees regenerating.

Secondary forests generally have lower carbon stocks than primary forests of 
the same type, while peatland has a very high carbon density. Commercial 
permits are usually given on secondary forests and are therefore of interest to 
businesses.

The vast majority of primary forest and peatlands are already protected by 
Indonesian law, although enforcement is notoriously weak. If secondary forests 
are not included in the moratorium, Greenpeace and Friends of the Earth say, 
the ban will be virtually ineffective.

In January, Kuntoro told local media that all standing forests would be 
protected. He told Asia Sentinel, however, that the definition was still being 
discussed and that the demarcation of forests was not a simple matter. The task 
force, he said, is now working on mapping.

"We cannot assume that something that is defined as primary is primary at the 
moment," he said.

"Sometimes you will find other types of forest in the so-called primary forest 
area, you'll find degraded land in the secondary forest area. That makes things 
complicated. The most important thing is to come up with one reference map that 
illustrates the reality on the ground."

The Palm Oil Producers Association (Gapki), which has done much of the 
corporate lobbying to the government, now says that it would be happy with any 
agreement that allowed them to expand production. Indonesia also has ambitious 
targets to double palm oil production by 2020 to meet soaring demand.   

"The Ministry of Forestry says there are 35 million hectares of degraded land 
that can be used. That's more than enough. Our rate of expansion is only 
400,000 hectares a year," said Fadhil Hasan, Gapki executive director.

"We are happy as long as the government provides us with a mechanism to use 
that degraded land and inform us of what the procedure is," he said.

With major corporate players showing some flexibility on the moratorium and 
consensus that there is enough idle land for commercial use, activists say that 
there is no reason to stall the decree any longer.

"The delay has been too long," Elfian of Greenomics said. "The decree should 
have been issued before Jan. 1, but even now, it's still unclear. There is no 
need for Kuntoro's office to say that this is because of business lobbying, 
because he is the one in power."

Kuntoro said the draft had been passed to the office of Vice President 
Boediono, which will deal with all final concerns before referring the law to 
the president for approval.

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



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