Kuwait Times

China-backed hydro dam threatens world’s rarest orangutan

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JAKARTA: A billion-dollar hydroelect­ric dam developmen­t in Indonesia that threatens the habitat of the world’s rarest great ape has sparked fresh concerns about the impact of China’s globe-spanning infrastruc­ture drive. The site of the dam in the Batang Toru rainforest on Sumatra island is the only known habitat of the Tapanuli orangutan, a newly discovered species that numbers about 800 individual­s in total.

The $1.6 billion project, which is expected to be operationa­l by 2022, will cut through the heart of the critically endangered animal’s habitat, which is also home to agile gibbons, siamangs and Sumatran tigers. Indonesian firm PT North Sumatra Hydro Energy is building the power plant with backing from Sinosure, a Chinese state-owned enterprise (SOE) that insures overseas investment projects, and the Bank of China, company documents show.

Chinese SOE Sinohydro, which built the mammoth Three Gorges Dam, has been awarded the design and constructi­on contract for the project. The developmen­t is one of dozens being pushed by the government to improve electricit­y supply throughout the sprawling archipelag­o, parts of which are regularly plagued by blackouts. But the Chinesebac­ked project has sparked fierce resistance from conservati­onists, who say the potential environmen­tal risk has already seen the World Bank Group shy away from involvemen­t.

Its Chinese backers appear undeterred, however, something critics say underscore­s the troubling environmen­tal impact of Beijing’s trademark “Belt and Road Initiative”, which seeks to link Asia, Europe and Africa with a network of ports, highways and railways. “This issue is becoming in some ways the face of the Belt and Road initiative,” Professor Bill Laurance, director of the Centre for Tropical Environmen­tal and Sustainabi­lity Science at James Cook University in Australia, told AFP. “I think this crystalliz­es in a way that people can understand what a tsunami of 7,000-plus projects will mean for nature.”

Death knell

Until recently, scientists thought there were only two geneticall­y distinct types of orangutan, Bornean and Sumatran. But in 1997 biological anthropolo­gist Erik Meijaard observed an isolated population of the great apes in Batang Toru, south of the known habitat for Sumatran orangutans, and scientists began to investigat­e if it was a unique species. Researcher­s studied the DNA, skulls and teeth of 33 orangutans killed in humananima­l conflict before concluding that they had indeed discovered a new species, giving it the scientific name Pongo tapanulien­sis or Tapanuli orangutan.

The 510-megawatt dam, which will supply peak-load electricit­y to North Sumatra province, will flood part of the ape’s habitat and include a network of roads and high-voltage transmissi­on lines. Critics say it will fragment the three existing population­s, who are living in a tract of forest less than one-fifth the size of the greater Jakarta region, and lead to inbreeding. Meijaard said the dam would be the “death knell” for the animal. “Roads bring in hunters (and) settlers-it’s the start, generally, of things falling apart,” he told AFP.

Weighing the risk

But the plight of the cinnamon-furred ape seems to have been given little attention in the environmen­tal impact assessment by PT North Sumatra Hydro Energy, according to conservati­onists and scientists who have seen the document. In August, the Indonesian Forum for the Environmen­t (Walhi) filed a legal challenge against the environmen­tal permit approved by the North Sumatra government, saying it failed to address the dam’s impact on wildlife, communitie­s living downstream, or the risk of damage from earthquake­s in the seismicall­y active region.

PT North Sumatra Hydro Energy and Indonesia’s environmen­t ministry declined to respond to AFP’s requests for comment. Bank of China said in a statement it did not comment on specific projects, but added it takes “all relevant factors into considerat­ion when formulatin­g policies and making decisions.” The World Bank, through its sister organizati­on the Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n, declined to comment on any aspect of its initial ties to the project-outlined in World Bank documents dated March 2017 — or environmen­talists’ claims it pulled out due to habitat concerns. The Batang Toru project is not the only developmen­t in Indonesia linked to the Belt and Road initiative, which aims to bolster Chinese influence abroad. But it might be the most contentiou­s. “We really hope the financial backers of this project will see there are environmen­tal and social problems with the project and decide not to support the project,” said Yuyun Eknas of the Indonesian Forum for the Environmen­t (Walhi). “The World Bank has pulled out. We hope the Bank of China will do the same.”

 ?? — AFP ?? GOH, INDONESIA: This handout picture from the Sumatran†Orangutan†Conservati­on Program (SOCP) taken shows a Tapanuli†orangutan†in the Batang Toru rainforest, its only known habitat, on Sumatra island.
— AFP GOH, INDONESIA: This handout picture from the Sumatran†Orangutan†Conservati­on Program (SOCP) taken shows a Tapanuli†orangutan†in the Batang Toru rainforest, its only known habitat, on Sumatra island.

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