Kuwait Times

Can Indonesia avoid repeat of 2015 haze crisis?

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As another outbreak of forest fires in Indonesia sends harmful smoke drifting across parts of Southeast Asia, researcher­s and environmen­tal activists have urged Jakarta to step up efforts to prevent a repeat of the last major haze crisis in 2015. Emergencie­s were declared in six Indonesian provinces on Sumatra island and in Kalimantan last week as fires raged, while neighborin­g Singapore and Malaysia issued health warnings about the air pollution that is heading their way.

Arie Rompas, a Greenpeace Indonesia forest campaigner who is from Kalimantan on Borneo island, said that with no rain since July, peatland fires were intensifyi­ng in areas burned in the 2015 disaster. “Our courts have ordered the government to prevent this and commit more resources to extinguish­ing fires, and to name and prosecute the plantation­s where fires occurred in the past,” Rompas told the Thomson Reuters Foundation. “Without this, fires will worsen and the situation could be the same as in 2015.”

Indonesian farmers burn huge swathes of forest and peatland every year to clear land for agricultur­al expansion, creating a vast haze that clouds the skies over large parts of the region. With drought affecting many areas of Indonesia as a mild El Nino weather pattern disrupts rainfall, the worry in vulnerable parts of Southeast Asia is that this year’s haze will exceed that caused by the devastatin­g fires in 2015.

Between June and October that year, about 2.6 million hectares of land burned in Indonesia, mainly on Sumatra and Borneo islands, said a 2016 World Bank report. A

Harvard University study linked the 2015 haze to more than 100,000 premature deaths in Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore. Facing domestic and regional pressure, Indonesia switched its focus from containing fires to preventing them after the 2015 crisis, which cost the country $16 billion and caused more than 500,000 people to suffer respirator­y ailments.

President Joko Widodo introduced a series of measures and policies that forestry researcher­s say have helped reduce the number of fires and intensity of the haze in the last two years. Widodo, who visited some of the worst-hit provinces in 2015, renewed the previous government’s moratorium on new conversion permits for primary forest and peatlands. Helena Varkkey, a lecturer at the University of Malaya in Kuala Lumpur, said banning the use of forest and peatland for new plantation­s could reduce fires because cleared land is often burned to prepare it for planting.

In 2018, the government went further, halting the issuance of new permits for oil palm plantation­s and shifting the focus to higher productivi­ty on existing plantation­s, said Varkkey, who has researched transbound­ary haze for more than 15 years. Earlier this year, Indonesia’s environmen­t minister said the government planned to make the forest clearing moratorium, which has been extended since 2011, permanent. Forestry researcher­s said Widodo should back this idea and expand its scope to include re-grown forested areas.

Forest people

Widodo has also vowed to return 12.7 million hectares of land to indigenous people following a historic 2013 court ruling to lift state control of customary forests. Last year he signed an agrarian reform decree aimed at issuing titles to the landless and raising farm incomes. Researcher­s said that plan would help ease poverty, increase communitie­s’ sense of ownership over forests, and reduce illegal access to forest areas and banned activities like burning.

Arief Wijaya, forests and climate manager at the World Resources Institute Indonesia, a think tank, said support for forest-dependent people to produce and sell products not derived from wood was crucial to help Indonesia manage forests better. “For forest-rich provinces like Papua, agroforest­ry, aquacultur­e and eco-tourism are feasible options to promote non-timber forest products, and boost local economic developmen­t,” he said.

Peatland priority

Other policies introduced since 2015 include educating and training communitie­s and farmers in fire prevention and setting up a Peatland Restoratio­n Agency. Ancient peaty soil is particular­ly flammable when dry, often causing fires to spread beyond their intended areas. “The key to fire and haze prevention in Indonesia centres on the question of how to restore flammable deforested peatlands back to the fire-proof system they once were,” said climate scientist David Gaveau.

Given the vast and remote nature of peatland areas, greater local incentives and more funding will be needed for Indonesia to achieve its restoratio­n targets by the end of 2020, he added. Jakarta has also drafted in the military to combat forest fires when needed, built early warning towers, and organized patrols to monitor burning. And closer coordinati­on between local government­s, villagers and agribusine­ss companies has helped reduce fire risks.

But last month, Indonesia’s Supreme Court ruled that Widodo and his cabinet ministers must still do more to stem the haze problem. The court ordered the government to name companies that owned land where the 2015 fires broke out, and issue regulation­s providing guidance on compensati­on for damage in such cases. “Open palm oil plantation data is important to show who’s accountabl­e for the burned areas, as well as to enforce the law,” said Varkkey, who also backs a more regional approach. Five years ago, Indonesian lawmakers approved a 2002 pact crafted by the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) to tackle haze pollution at the regional level. — Reuters

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