‘Deforestation of reserves not sustainable’
> MNS says Terengganu can get revenue without environmental destruction
PETALING JAYA: The degazetting of permanent forest reserves the size of 4,500 football fields in Terengganu has sent the wrong message to the world, said Malaysian Nature Society Terengganu branch chairman Wong Chee Ho.
Wong said the current practice of degazetting forest reserves is not sustainable.
“Solutions where revenue can be generated from forests that remain intact is now available, the state should start adopting this in order to provide a better future for everyone.
“Instead of converting more forests to oil palm estates, properly managed forests can provide Terengganu with a sustainable source of income in the form of timber, traditional herbal products and ecotourism,” he said in a statement yesterday.
News reports have revealed that the 4,515 ha of permanent forest reserves are to be given to TDM Bhd, a governmentlinked company, for expansion of their plantations.
Wong said MNS Terengganu is not against palm oil as crop but expansion of plantations must follow strict guidelines.
Guidelines set by the Roundtable for Sustainable Palm Oil prohibits the clearing of high conservation value forests, according to the new planting procedure.
“A study by the Forest Research Institute of Malaysia (FRIM) via high resolution satellite images showed that forest areas in Peninsular Malaysia has declined by 200,000ha between 2010 and 2015 due to land conversion.
“The same study found that in Terengganu and other states, oil palm and rubber plantations have been the main drivers of deforestation.”
Wong said researchers from FRIM and Duke University have quantified the impact of deforestation on flood mitigation, where they found that conversion of 1% of inland forest to oil palm increased the number of flooding days by 26.8%.
They also found that the number of deaths and flood evacuees per year increased with expanding oil palm acreage, he added.
Wong urged the Terengganu state government to shift the emphasis towards nature-based tourism as a key income earner for the people.