Yuma Sun

Deforestat­ion in Indonesia spiked last year, but resources analyst sees better overall trend

- BY VICTORIA MILKO

JAKARTA, Indonesia – From trees felled in protected national parks to massive swaths of jungle razed for palm oil and paper plantation­s, Indonesia had a 27% uptick in primary forest loss in 2023 from the previous year, according to a World Resources Institute analysis of deforestat­ion data. But the loss is still seen as historical­ly low compared to the 2010s, it said.

“Deforestat­ion has been declining from six or so years ago, when there were peak rates,” said Rod Taylor, global director of the forests program at WRI. “It’s good news and commendabl­e for Indonesia.”

But others saw cause for concern in the uptick, and tied some of the more recent deforestat­ion to the world’s appetite for mining Indonesia’s vast deposits of nickel, which is critical for the green energy transition.

The latest data from the University of Maryland’s Global Land Analysis and Discovery laboratory was shared on Global Forest Watch – a platform run by WRI that provides data, technology and tools for monitoring the world’s forests.

A vast tropical archipelag­o stretching across the equator, Indonesia is home to the world’s third-largest rainforest, with a variety of endangered wildlife and plants, including orangutans, elephants and giant forest flowers. Some live nowhere else. Since 1950, more than 74 million hectares (285,715 square miles) of Indonesian rainforest – an area twice the size of Germany – have been logged, burned or degraded for developmen­t of palm oil, paper and rubber plantation­s, nickel mining and other commoditie­s, according to Global Forest Watch. Indonesia is the biggest producer of palm oil, one of the largest exporters of coal and a top producer of pulp for paper. It also exports oil and gas, rubber, tin and other resources.

Expansion of industrial plantation­s occurred in several locations adjacent to existing palm oil tree and pulp and paper plantation­s on the tropical islands of Kalimantan and West Papua, according to the analysis.

The Indonesian Ministry of Environmen­t and Forestry said the expansion occurred in concession­s granted before the current administra­tion took office in 2014.

The Indonesian Ministry of Environmen­t and Forestry did not respond to questions and a request for comment sent by The Associated Press. Global Forest Watch’s data on Indonesia’s loss of primary forests – which are old-growth forests typically high in stored carbon and rich in biodiversi­ty – are higher than the official Indonesian statistics. That’s because much of the primary forest loss in Indonesia, according to the analysis, is within areas that Indonesia classifies as secondary forest – areas that have regenerate­d through largely natural processes after human actions such as agricultur­e clearing or timber harvest. Secondary forests typically

have reduced capacity for storing carbon than primary forests.

Deforestat­ion linked to the mining industry occurred in Sumatra, Sulawesi, Mlauku and Kalimantan, according to the analysis.

Indonesia has the world’s largest reserves of nickel – a critical material for electric vehicles, solar panels and other goods needed for the green energy transition. And part of this deforestat­ion can be directly linked to the expansion of Indonesia’s nickel industry, said Timer Manurung, director of Auriga Nusantara, a nongovernm­ental conservati­on organizati­on based in Indonesia.

Manurung said it’s not

clear exactly how much of Indonesia deforestat­ion is due to mining. But he called it a “significan­t driver,” and said the government’s rapid developmen­t of the country’s mining and nickel industry – including more than 20 new smelters to process the nickel ore – is “repeating Indonesia’s oil palm and pulpwood mistakes” of increasing deforestat­ion.

But Taylor noted that deforestat­ion done on a massive scale seems to be shrinking, compared to the past.

In the 2010s there was gargantuan oil palm, timber and large-scale plantation expansion across Indonesia. Research in the Nature Climate

Change journal found that the deforestat­ion rate doubled to approximat­ely 2 million hectares per year during 2004-2014.

In 2023, primary forest loss in patches greater than 100 hectares made up just 15% of the loss, according to the analysis.

Taylor attributes this lack of large-scale deforestat­ion patches to the reputation­al risks that companies face if they are found to be razing trees. In recent decades nongovernm­ental organizati­ons, consumers and government­s – including the European Union – have pushed for companies to move away from deforestat­ion practices.

 ?? YUSUF WAHI/AP ?? A HILL THAT HAS BEEN CLEARED FROM TREES to make way for a corn plantation is visible in Polewali Mandar, South Sulawesi, Indonesia, on April 20.
YUSUF WAHI/AP A HILL THAT HAS BEEN CLEARED FROM TREES to make way for a corn plantation is visible in Polewali Mandar, South Sulawesi, Indonesia, on April 20.

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