South China Morning Post

Indonesian mill expansions a threat to region

Plan by pulp and paper companies to increase production in peatlands raises risk of wildfires that will spread deadly haze

- ALEX HELAN Alex Helan is an analyst at Forests and Finance platform

One of the few mercies of the Covid-19 pandemic in Southeast Asia is that the initial outbreak did not occur during a severe fire and haze year, and that the wet and cool climatic pattern known as La Niña has kept fires down in the past few years.

This looks like it’s about to change. Meteorolog­ists are predicting 2022 will see the return of hot, dry and fire-prone conditions known as El Niño.

If Covid-19 had arrived during a catastroph­ic El Niño fire year like 2015 or 2019 – when tens of millions of people in parts of Indonesia, Singapore and Malaysia were affected by toxic smoke – the death toll would probably have been far higher.

Exposure to air pollution, like the haze that results from forest fires, dramatical­ly worsens the health effects of Covid-19.

It is becoming apparent that the coronaviru­s is now globally endemic, which is why cutting susceptibi­lity to it and other respirator­y diseases by tackling air pollution, especially fine particulat­e matter, is a public health priority. It is also why the planned expansion of two massive pulp and paper mills in Sumatra should raise alarm bells for Indonesia and its neighbours.

The vast pulpwood plantation­s controlled by Asia Pulp & Paper (APP) and Asia Pacific Resources Internatio­nal (APRIL) have the largest fire footprints in Indonesia. Satellite analysis shows that the plantation­s burned every year between 2015 and 2019, with a total burned area of nearly 250,000 hectares – 3.5 times the land mass of Singapore.

This has serious impacts on air quality, with residents of Riau and South Sumatra – home to APRIL and APP pulp operations – forecast to lose up to six years of life expectancy compared with population­s in areas where air pollution meets World Health Organizati­on safety guidelines.

Furthermor­e, prevailing winds from these fires blow the toxic haze to Singapore and Peninsular Malaysia.

Whenever the fires rage and the haze spreads, the media and policymake­rs are quick to blame “slash and burn” smallholde­r farmers. Yet the far more important question is: who turned parts of Indonesia, a country of tropical rainforest­s, into a tinderbox?

The answer lies in the fate of Indonesia’s peatlands, areas of carbon-rich swampy soil deposited over millions of years that, when drained and dried out for cultivatio­n, become extremely flammable – like a kind of young coal. Peat fires actually burn undergroun­d, spreading insidiousl­y, and are difficult to extinguish. They also kick out extremely high levels of fine particle air pollution.

APP and APRIL’s wood suppliers have cleared, drained and planted on 887,000 hectares of peatlands. While these landbanks supply the fibre necessary to produce paper, tissue and fabrics like viscose rayon, they have also created a monumental fire hazard that the region must now face.

Despite the dire health and environmen­tal consequenc­es, APP and APRIL are planning to increase production by 150 per cent and 55 per cent, respective­ly. This will mean more cultivatio­n of flammable peatland, increasing the risk of fires.

The stakes are huge. If the mill expansions proceed, fires and haze are likely to get worse. But the expansions will require billions of dollars in financing. Banks should see the writing on the wall and refuse to stump up the cash.

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