Selasa, 29 September 2009

Roads are ruining the rainforests

Roads are ruining the rainforests

Source: www.Newscientist.com


"THE best thing you could do for the Amazon is to bomb all the roads." That might sound like an eco-terrorist's threat, but they're actually the words of Eneas Salati, one of Brazil's most respected scientists. Thomas Lovejoy, a leading American biologist, is equally emphatic: "Roads are the seeds of tropical forest destruction."

They are quite right. Roads are rainforest killers. Without rampant road expansion, tropical forests around the world would not be vanishing at a rate of 50 football fields a minute, an assault that imperils myriad species and spews billions of tonnes of greenhouse gases into the atmosphere each year. We will never devise effective strategies to slow rainforest destruction unless we confront this reality.

In our increasingly globalised world, roads are running riot. Brazil has just punched a 1200-kilometre highway (the BR-163) into the heart of the Amazon and is in the process of building another 900-kilometre road (the BR-319) through largely pristine forest. Three new highways are slicing across the Andes, from the Amazon to the Pacific. Road networks in Sumatra are opening up some of the island's last forests to loggers and hunters. A study published in Science found that 52,000 kilometres of logging roads had appeared in the Congo basin between 1976 and 2003 (vol 316, p 1451).

As my colleagues and I reveal in a forthcoming article in Trends in Ecology and Evolution, these are just a small sample of the many new road projects slicing through tropical frontiers.

Why are roads so bad for rainforests? Tropical forests have a uniquely complex structure and humid, dark microclimate that sustain a huge number of endemic species. Many of these avoid altered habitats near roads and cannot traverse even narrow road clearings. Others run the risk of being hit by vehicles or killed by people hunting near roads. This can result in diminished or fragmented wildlife populations, and can lead to local extinctions.

In remote frontier areas, where law enforcement is often weak, new roads can open a Pandora's box of other problems, such as illegal logging, colonisation and land speculation. In Brazilian Amazonia, 95 per cent of deforestation and fires occur within 50 kilometres of roads. In Suriname, most illegal gold mines are located near roads. In tropical Africa, hunting is significantly more intensive near roads.

Environmental disasters often begin as a narrow slice into the forest. Rainforests are found mostly in developing nations where there are strong economic incentives to provide access to logging, oil and mineral operations and agribusiness. Once the way is open, waves of legal and illegal road expansion follow. For instance, the Belém-Brasília highway, completed in the 1970s, has developed into a 400-kilometre-wide swathe of forest destruction across the eastern Amazon.

Beyond the forest itself, frontier roads imperil many indigenous peoples, especially those trying to live with limited contact with outsiders. As I write, indigenous groups in the Peruvian Amazon are stridently protesting the proliferation of new oil, gas and logging roads into their traditional territories. The roads bring loggers, gold miners and ranchers who often subjugate the indigenous people. Even worse, the invaders can bring in deadly new diseases.

Throughout the tropics, infections such as malaria, dengue fever, enteric pathogens and HIV have all been shown to rise sharply after new roads are built. Some indigenous groups, such as the Surui tribe of Brazilian Amazonia, have been driven to the edge of extinction by roads and the invading loggers, colonists and diseases they bring.

What can we do to slow the onslaught? First, we must vastly improve environmental impact assessments for planned roads. In many developing nations, EIAs focus solely on the roads themselves, completely ignoring the knock-on effects. In Brazil, for instance, EIAs for Amazonian highways focus only on a narrow swathe along the route, often recommending only paltry mitigation measures, such as helping animals to relocate before building begins. EIAs for certain mines, hydroelectric dams and other large developments focus only on the project itself while ignoring the impact of the roads it will invariably spawn. New roads will continue to drive rainforest destruction so long as the EIA process is so fundamentally flawed.

The second thing we have to do is fight to keep the most destructive roads from being built - the ones that penetrate pristine frontier areas. There is no shortage of battles to wage. A proposed highway between Colombia and Panama, for example, would expose one of the world's most biologically important areas, the Chocó-Darién wilderness, to rampant destruction. Likewise, Brazil's BR-319 highway is threatening to open up the central Amazon like a zipper.

Brazil's BR-319 highway is threatening to open up the central Amazon region like a zipper

Finally, we need to pressure those promoting these frontier roads. These include timber corporations like Asia Pulp & Paper and Rimbunan Hijau, international lenders such as the Asian, African and Inter-American Development Banks, and massive infrastructure schemes such as Brazil's Programme to Accelerate Growth. In their scramble for tropical timber, minerals, oil and agricultural products, China and its corporations have become perhaps the biggest drivers of destructive road expansion.

Restricting frontier roads is by far the most realistic and cost-effective approach to conserving rainforests and their amazing biodiversity and climate-stabilising capacity. As Pandora quickly learned, it is far harder to thrust the evils of the world back into the box than to simply keep it closed in the first place.

William Laurance is a research professor at James Cook University in Cairns, Australia, and the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute in Panama

Senin, 17 Agustus 2009

Orangutan fate

Hope of freedom for orang-utans dashed
248 endangered primates left in cages after mining company pulls out of rescue
By Martin Hickman
Monday, 27 July 2009



A world-renowned programme to return hundreds of orang-utans threatened with extinction to the wild has been thrown into disarray by the withdrawal of Britain's biggest mining company from Borneo.

Dozens of orang-utans that had been due to be released this month have been left locked in cages after BHP-Billiton warned it could no longer guarantee the safety of the animals on forests it had been surveying for coal.

With BHP's support over the past two years, orang-utans from a rehabilitation centre – made famous by the BBC TV series Orang-utan Diary – have been released onto BHP's land in Kalimantan. But last month the world's largest mining company told investors it was withdrawing from the area for "strategic reasons" which it declined to explain.
A planned airlift of 48 adult orang-utans scheduled to take place on 20 July was cancelled a week before it had been due to take place.

Lone Dröscher-Nielsen, the former air stewardess who cares for 650 orang-utans at the Nyaru Menteng Orang-utan Rehabilitation Centre, said BHP had warned that the Indonesian government was likely to hand its coal concessions to other companies who would not match its environmental stewardship of the land.

She added that it now seemed unlikely the Anglo-Australia mining giant would fund a plan to a create a 250,000-hectare wildlife reserve in central Borneo that could have sited 1,000 orang-utans, a genetically viable long-term population.

Some conservationists fear that orang-utans could be wiped out in the wild in little more than a decade due to the destruction of their habitat for logging, mining and palm oil plantations.
After cancelling the airlift, Ms Droscher -Nielsen, who has spent years trying to re-introduce animals rescued from destroyed habitats elsewhere on Borneo, sent supporters an anxious message saying she was at the end of her tether.

Workers at the sanctuary, funded by the Borneo Orang-utan Survival Foundation (BOSF), spend months preparing for the release of orang-utans, ensuring they are free of illness and scouting for remote forests free of other orang-utans, poachers and human contact.
An emergency working party of British conservationists has been meeting at Prince Charles's official residence in London, Clarence House, backed by the Prince's Rainforests Project to try to save the airlifts. The group hopes BHP-Billiton will still assist BOSF despite pulling out of the area.

With the company's helicopters, mapping and other logistical support, BOSF released 36 orang-utans in 2007 and 25 last year.
Speaking to The Independent on Friday, Ms Droscher-Nielsen said: "There has been a lot of stress, because BHP is pulling out. We have got 650 animals and 48 we wanted to release. They are wild animals. They have been in cages for over a year waiting to be released. It's very difficult to find sites, because when you do they are usually have a logging or mining concession."
BHP has been considering if it can help with an airlift next month, providing the right homes for animals can be found. "BHP Billiton made an offer to the Nyaru Menteng Orang-utan Rehabilitation Centre to potentially assist with their planned relocation at a more suitable time in August, and have also assisted in the identification of suitable relocation sites," the company commented.

Tree fellers: The story of orang-utans
*Orang-utans once lived across swaths of south Asia. Now two species remain, the Bornean orang-utan (pongo pygmaeus) and the Sumatran orang-utan (pongo abelii).
*Sharing 97 per cent of their DNA with humans, orang-utans keep detailed mental maps of the location of forest fruit, and they can distinguish between 1,000 plants.
*It is believed they can spend their lives without touching the ground, but their highly arboreal nature makes them vulnerable to deforestation for logging, mining and palm oil plantations. Babies are often sold as pets.
*Between 2004 and 2008, their numbers fell to 49,600 on Borneo and to 6,600 on Sumatra.

Senin, 27 Juli 2009

Story of Viat

Mohamad Rayan, Malinau

The story of viat began when Marcus and i went visiting Punan Setarap village at the beginning of the end of May 2009. it was a hot day when we arrive at the village. We were accompany by Long Kebinu resident who stirred the Ketingting for us to reach Setarap and Punan setarap villages.In Setarap village we did our routine survey of the village demography.

It was normal answers we receive from them on population, on education, on health, on diet, on livelihoods, logging activities, on occupation, on village harmony etc, etc, etc.On the issue of border harmony, they explained that they informed us that some of their old residents decided to move out and set their own village. Since most of deciding to move out are of the Punan dayak ethnicities, hence the village is known Punan setarap village. According to Setarap leader, they decide to move to have more independence in managing themselves.

We walked along Punan Setarap people and asked for the residence of the head of the village. Several Punan kids pointed to the house on the top of the hill. Yes, most of the village in Malinau are built along Malinau river in East Kalimantan. And Punan Setarap is in the top of the hill.We were welcomed by the head of the village, Alan Laing. His father is Ruit Laing as the traditional village leader. He was 1.60 metres or less and his physic fits to its height. He was open but reserved in answering our questions. Mind you he is getting nearly 200 questions from us.

May be from the name, we would guess they are already modernised. Yes, they have TV and with satelite dishes. However the village only have two generators to bring electricity to the village.

On the question of their name, ah, what is in the name. The dayak now have modern name such as Marcus, Ramses, Dany etc because the Protestant missionary had been here since 1960s maybe since the Dutch colonilization time. Beside the Protestant, there is also Catholic among Dayak population in Malinau.In Punan Setarap the village we visited, there exists only Catholic Church catering for 187 people. There is a primary school with local teacher only.

Not long, his wife brought the coffee out to us. The coffee is the harvest from their own farm. Their ladang is across the river. Marcus loved the coffee. It seems coffee fits to the climate and easy to plant and not too much maintainance. It could be argued the coffee introduction by government for livelihoods is a success story.

Toward the end of discussion, Mr. Alan Laing, told us the story of Viat. It is a creature of tiger look alike. Marcus was startled and wanted to know more. It could be a finding like they were finding Pygmy Elephants. The Viat is siluman, changing form. It could be human look alike and could also be tiger look alike.

Is there Viat? I wonder.
Rayan in Malinau

Senin, 13 Juli 2009

Debt Nature Swap

Rabu, 01/07/2009
US$21,6 juta utang ke AS dialihkanDana dipakai untuk konservasi 7 juta ha hutan
Cetak

JAKARTA: Sekitar US$21,6 juta utang Indonesia kepada AS disepakati dialihkan untuk program konservasi atau debt for nature swap (DNS) yang meliputi sekitar 7 juta hektare kawasan hutan di Sumatra.Pengalihan utang itu sudah disepakati sejak beberapa waktu lalu di Bali. Kemarin, di Departemen Kehutanan, kesepakatan itu akhirnya ditandatangani oleh Dubes AS Cameron Hume dan Dirjen Pengelolaan Utang Departemen Keuangan Rahmat Waluyanto, disaksikan Menteri Kehutanan M.S.Kaban.Cameron Hume mengatakan dana tersebut dapat digunakan untuk melestarikan 7 juta hektare area hutan di Sumatra bagian utara, Sumatra bagian tengah, dan Sumatra bagian selatan.

“Sumatra merupakan wilayah Indonesia yang memiliki keanekaragaman habitat dan spesies hewan yang unik seperti harimau Sumatra dan orang utan,” ujarnya.Lokasi program di Sumatra bagian utara dipusatkan di Taman Nasional (TN) Batang Gadis, di Sumatra bagian tengah di TN Bukit Tigapuluh dan Sumatra bagian selatan di TN Way Kamas.Perjanjian kerja sama tersebut dilakukan di bawah Undang-Undang Koservasi Hutan Tropis atau Tropical Forest Conservation Act (TFCA) di mana Indonesia menjadi negara ke-15 yang melakukan perjanjian itu dengan Amerika.Negara-negara lain yang pernah memperoleh program ini antara lain El Salvador, Belize, Banglades, Botswana, Kolombia, Kosta Rika, dan Filipina. Program hutang demi alam (DBS) ini diproyeksikan dapat mengumpulkan dana US$218 juta untuk perlindungan hutan tropis.Pemerintah AS, menurut Direktur Operasional Kehati Taufiq Alimi, sepakat mengalihkan piutangnya untuk kegiatan konservasi yang diperhitungkan dari utang pokok sebesar US$21,6 juta atau US$30 juta termasuk bunga hingga 8 tahun ke depan.“Pengembalian utang melalui kegiatan konservasi ini sudah diperhitungkan secara matang oleh Menteri Keuangan RI dan Pemerintah AS,” katanya.

Menurut dia, pembayaran utang melalui kegiatan konservasi merupakan jalan terbaik dibandingkan dengan jika pemerintah mengembalikan langsung uang tersebut kepada Pemerintah AS.“Pembayaran utang yang dialihkan ke kegiatan konservasi sangat bermanfaat melestarikan keanekaragaman hayati di Indonesia,” ujarnya.Taufiq menjelaskan kegiatan debt for nature swap di Indonesia dimulai sejak 1990 dan Pemerintah Amerika Serikat (AS) telah mengeluarkan kebijakan melalui Tropical Forest Conservation Act yang disetujui Kongres pada 1998 sebagai mekanisme untuk mengurangi utang luar negeri bagi negara-negara berkembang yang kaya sumber daya alamnya. “Peluang inilah yang ditangkap Pemerintah Indonesia,” katanya.Transfer danaMenteri Kehutanan M.S. Kaban mengatakan mekanisme pembayaran utang ini melalui transfer dana langsung ke rekening TFCA yang disebut Trust Fund.Dana dari Trust Fund ini akan menjadi dana yang siap mendanai hibah kegiatan konservasi hutan tropik di Sumatra, yang dilaksanakan kalangan LSM dan masyarakat lokal.Keputusan mengenai hibah akan dilakukan lembaga yang disebut Oversight Committee yang sehari-harinya dibantu Fund Administrator yang berfungsi sebagai sekretariat program TFCA.Oversight Committee terdiri dari tujuh orang masing-masing satu orang dari Pemerintah Indonesia, satu orang Pemerintah AS, satu orang perwakilan Conservation International (CI), satu orang perwakilan Yayasan Kehati dan tiga orang dari lembaga independen. “Administaror keuangan dilakukan Yayasan Kehati,” kata Kaban.Conservation International (CI) Foundation-lembaga swadaya masyarakat asal AS-dan Yayasan Keanekaragaman Hayati Indonesia (Kehati) menyumbang masing-masing US$1 juta dan mereka disebut swap partner.Taufiq Alimi mengatakan kedua LSM yang 'membeli' utang yang dialihkan untuk kegiatan konservasi selama 10 tahun itu, tidak akan mengambil keuntungan finansial.“Uang itu tidak kembali karena dipergunakan untuk kegiatan operasional maupun administratif konservasi,” ujar Taufiq.

Program Kehati diupayakan akan berjalan pada September 2009 dan rencananya program DNS TFCA untuk Sumatra akan secara resmi diluncurkan langsung oleh Presiden AS, Barack Obama, pada November 2009 di Indonesia.

(erwin.tambunan@bisnis. co.id)Oleh Erwin TambunanBisnis Indonesia

Berita CI dan Kehati

Berita
Berita Terkini Agenda Siaran Pers

Menghapus Hutang untuk Pelestarian Alam Sumatera

Conservation International dan Yayasan KEHATI membantu pemerintah menghapuskan hutang AS dan mengalihkannya untuk pelestarian alam
Bumi sangat memerlukan tutupan hutan tropis Indonesia yang utuh untuk menjaga keseimbangan iklim. Tanggung jawab menyelamatkannya tak hanya ada di tangan Indonesia, namun juga negara maju sebagai penyumbang polusi terbesar. Salah satu bentuk tanggung jawab tersebut dapat diwujudkan melalui mekanisme penghapusan hutang untuk melestarikan alam Indonesia (DNS).

Untuk mewujudkan kepeduliannya, Pemerintah Amerika Serikat (AS) hari ini Selasa (30/6) sepakat untuk menghapus hutang luar negeri Indonesia, hutang yang dihapus tersebut apabila dikalkulasi, hampir sebesar hampir 30 juta dolar AS selama 8 tahun. Keunikan dari penghapusan utang ini adalah keterlibatan dari LSM, yaitu hutang sebesar 2 juta dollar AS “dibeli” oleh 2 LSM lokal dan internasional, Yayasan KEHATI dan Conservation International.
“Keikutsertaan KEHATI merupakan bukti kesungguhan kami dalam melestarikan keanekaragaman hayati di Indonesia,” ujar Damayanti Buchori, Ph.D, Direktur Eksekutif Yayasan KEHATI Indonesia. “Kami sangat menghargai upaya semua pihak, sehingga dana yang seharusnya dibayarkan kepada Pemerintah Amerika untuk melunasi hutang luar negeri Indonesia dapat kembali ke negara ini, dan digunakan untuk melestarikan keanekaragaman hayati, khususnya Pulau Sumatera”.

Upaya memperjuangkan DNS di Indonesia, sudah dimulai sejak tahun 1990. DNS ini digunakan untuk memperoleh pelunasan hutang dengan mengalihkan pembayarannya pada kegiatan pelestarian hutan dan keanekaragaman hayati Sejauh ini sudah ada beberapa DNS lain yang telah berjalan, yaitu DNS dengan negara Jerman yang menggunakan mekanisme pembayaran yang berbeda. DNS dengan pemerintah Amerika Serikat ini dimungkinkan karena adanya kebijakan Undang-undang Konservasi Hutan Tropis (Tropical Forest Conservation Act-TFCA) ,yang telah disetujui oleh kongres di tahun 1998 sebagai mekanisme untuk mengurangi hutang luar negeri bagi negara negara berkembang yang kaya sumberdaya alamnya. Peluang ini segera ditangkap oleh pemerintah Indonesia untuk melunasi hutang sekaligus melestarikan alam.

“Melalui program ini, CI melanjutkan program CEPF (Critical Ecosystem Partnership Fund) tahun lalu di lokasi yang sama yaitu Pulau Sumatera, mengingat kondisi hutan Sumatera yang saat ini sedang dalam keaadaan kritis”, tutur Jatna Supriatna Ph.D, Regional Vice President Conservation International Indonesia. Lanjut Jatna, “Kami sangat mengharapkan mekanisme ini dapat menjadi contoh bagi negara lain demi mewujudkan tanggung jawabnya melestarikan hutan tropis dunia”.

CI telah terlibat dengan DNS sejak tahun 1987 di negara Bolivia, sehingga pengalaman di negara lain tersebut diharapkan dapat memberikan kontribusi positif dalam implementasi DNS di Indonesia. Program DNS kali ini disepakati untuk melestarikan tutupan hutan Sumatera yang menjadi habitat dari beberapa spesies kunci, yaitu Orangutan Sumatera (Pongo abelii), Badak Sumatera (Dicerorhinus sumatrensis), Gajah Sumatera (Elephas maximus) dan Harimau Sumatera (Phantera tigris sumatrae).

Program DNS merupakan sebuah penyelesaian yang baik bagi negara pengutang dan pemberi utang. Lebih dari 30 juta dollar atau setara dengan 300 milliar rupiah akan tetap dibelanjakan di Indonesia untuk keperluan konservasi, dan tidak mengalir ke negara maju.
DNS ini merupakan tantangan bagi pemerintah Indonesia untuk menunjukkan bahwa penghapusan hutang ini benar-benar dapat bermanfaat bagi penyelamatan hutan dan keanekaragaman hayati Indonesia. Program ini juga diharapkan dapat memberikan kontribusi yang signifikan dalam membangun kepercayaan (trust building) negara-negara donor bahwa pemerintah Indonesia memiliki kemampuan dalam mengelola sumberdaya alamnya secara berkelanjutan sehingga dapat mengurangi kemiskinan dan membantu menjaga kestabilan iklim dunia. Yayasan KEHATI dipercaya untuk mengelola dana hasil penghapusan utang itu bersama dengan mitra-mitranya yang bergiat dalam penyelamatan hutan Sumatera.

Diet may have caused orangutan extinction

Diet may have caused orangutan extinction

Mohamad Rayan , Malinau Sat, 07/11/2009 12:49 PM Opinion The Jakarta Post

Dayak eat orangutan! Marcus and I had been in the field in Malinau for nearly 6 weeks and it was the first time we heard that the Dayak tribe ate orangutan. Our catch phrase before we set out was "Punan eat everything". Dayak Punan (a nomadic tribe from Borneo) told us they ate every animal in the forest near Mt. Bintang in Malinau. And we realized there were no orangutans near Malinau city or in all of Malinau district.

When we asked what they did hunt for, the Punan Dayak from Punan Setarap village said they hunted boar, deer, bear, anteaters, porcupine and monkey.

When we asked the Dayak community about their hunting, how they got their protein for example, they gave us surprising answers. The Kenyah people also revealed that they enjoyed most of the animals in the forest, but the Kenyah are now more connected to the community and development, as symbolized by the election of a regent from the Dayak Kenyah line. The Kenyah, Lun Dayeh, Brusu, Long Alango tribes consume most of the animals in nearby forests. They also fish in the crystal-clear water creeks inside the forest. With the clear water, it is easier for them to catch fish from the river.

This topic does raise big questions, for example, why are there no orangutans in Malinau?
According to reports and ground checks in the surrounding communities, local tribes do eat the animal, but does that mean they have caused its extinction? Or is it because forests have been so heavily depleted in the area?

The current orangutan population, according to data from the directorate general for forest protection and nature conservation, is believed to be 61,234. Most are found in the forests of Borneo (54,567), with the remainder in Sumatra (6,667).

Kalimantan has been studied, surveyed and explored by local scientists and international experts since the 1800s. However, there are no studies or concrete answers as to why there are no orangutans in Malinau.

However, one study suggested that in Serawak, 10,000 years ago, human did eat orangutans. The book, The Orangutan, Its Biology and Conservation, was written by Leobert E. M. De Boer in 1982.

For the Iban tribe from Serawak, eating orangutan is taboo and they still have orangutans in their area. The evidence suggests that it is possible the Dayak tribe may have caused the extinction of orangutans in their area.

The writer is Community Relations and Development Manager for the Borneo Tropical Rainforest Foundations. This is personal opinion.

Kamis, 02 Juli 2009

Dayak Conflicts

Mohamad Rayan. Reporting.Malinau.

Simmering under the surface in Malinau is fragile ethnicities relationship. This is latest update report from the conservation district. It would not be a long report.Well, it started as usual when Marcus and i came to ask the question on any conflicts with the neighbouring villages, the Setarap leader confessed that they have problems with Setulang village and Punan Setarap.

Couple days later Setulang leaders informed me that they are having negotiation meeting on disputed area for farming with Setarap residents. The disputed area issue is not resolved yet. The area is disputed due to the fact there will be a palm oil plantation planning to open near the disputed area. This will be reported in the next report in Konservasiindonesia (KI).

Actually the report by Cifor on their study of village boundary couple years ago before they ceased program in Malinau, there always be potential conflicts on the ground. And at the core of the conflict normally there is issue of economic interest such when mining or logging company wanted to open the operation in an area.In this desk report, i would just paste the translation i did from a newspaper article in February 2007 below and previous article in KI.

Claiming village traditional forest, two ethnic Dayak closed to clashingMohamad Rayan. Translator.Rakyat Merdeka. February 2007

Due to the boundary claimed as traditional land, two villages were in the brink of clashing that is Respen Tubu village and Sentaban, East Kalimantan.Even, the village clash did not happened, the punching of one of the village resident in the dispute did occur at the traditional leaders meeting of the two villagers on Friday 9 February 2007.Because of the punching, the victim brought to clinic Mentarang due to bleeding nose. Even though there was agreement for both villagers to keep emotion down during the meeting. It was also suggested by both village leaders to keep calm.Traditional leader of Dayak Merau, Atong Aran with one resident said the problem aroused out of unhappiness of their group due to the boundary of the forest claimed by them. “This disputed boundary claimed as traditional forest is in the area of PT BKS.

They (Seturan 4 dayak ethnicities) thought the decision to allow the logging to operate in the traditional forest is only one ethnicities (Punan) without telling the other ethnicities.”“This decision is only by one ethnicity only, but actually there are (in Seturan) ethnicities dayak of Abay, Merap, Merau, Bilau and Punan, they are all related.”Feeling that the decision on allowing the company is done by one ethnicity, the other ethnicities are not approving. According to Atong Aran, they are requesting that the other 4 ethnicities be involved with in every decision on traditional people rights.They also acknowledged that before the logging company entered to location, village residents never received the explanation on the planning of the company going to the community traditional forest.“At the beginning there was no notification to us. May be the company only informed only the undeveloped ethnic Punan” explained Atong Aran.That is why from 4 ethnicities lived in Sentaban village, expecting this problem be resolved in family spirit.If it cannot be solved in this meeting now, they suggest the company which is operating now be terminated temporarily until there is agreement.“We are not expecting the community be suffering and became victims. If the problem is between community and the government, or the community and the company, the conflict is still resolvable. But if the conflict happened between communities, it could end up in chasing each other and caused the riot like yesterday, he said”Budiansyah, the representative of PT BKS conceded that it has informed the community including government before operating.

However, after 3 months in operation, there is new problem from a group of claiming the area as their area.He was also present as a good listener on this conflict of area ownership by several groups who are claiming and counter-claiming with the size of the area is 47.000 ha. Budiansyah is also looking for the truth.“We have done a socialisation to one of the village at the district government, however other community complained on this problem.The complainers had also reported the case to sub district Police for requesting to organize a meeting and in that meeting i will be present for finding which party is the right one,” said Budiansyah when questioned in the front of Mentarang sub district police station Friday 9 January 2007.Meanwhile the acting sub district head, Marson R Langub after leading a meeting from the two disputing group confessed still confused. Ida/jpnnSumber: http://www.rakyatmerdeka.co.id/indexframe.php?url=nusantara/index.php?q=news&id=4460Translated by Rayan 23 June 2009.

Selasa, 30 Juni 2009

Save Tropical Forest

Mohamad Rayan. Clipping

A New Idea to Save Tropical Forests Takes FlightJohn O. Niles, special to mongabay.com June 29, 2009This is the first in a series of tropical forest policy commentaries John-O Niles will be writing for Mongabay.com leading up to the December U.N. climate meeting in Copenhagen.

John-O is the Director of the Tropical Forest Group.
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In late 1991, I had just finished my undergraduate degree in forest economics at the University of Vermont. The Rio Earth Summit was approaching and everyone seemed to be wearing “Save the Rainforest” T-shirts. So, being 22 years old and green in more ways than one, I decided to hitchhike across Africa and see the rainforest myself. After a summer working in an Alaska salmon cannery to save some money and thumbing my way back across America in station wagons and 18 wheelers, I grabbed a $199 one-way flight to Spain. I crossed the Strait of Gibraltar on a ferry and proceeded to get solidly conned my first night in Morocco by one of Tangiers’ world-famous touts. I then got sick in the Sahara and stranded during a coup in Algeria. I stayed with a one-eyed farmer (Jo-Man) in Niger, and floated down the Niger River into northwestern Nigeria on a pirogue. I wandered around the notoriously difficult nation for a few weeks and then headed southeast to make my way into Cameroon. In Cameroon, I knew, I could see some real rainforests. While phoning home from Calabar, Nigeria, to my distraught mother (I hadn’t contacted her in months and she had called the State Department to report me missing), I ran into Liza Gadsby. Liza and her partner, Peter Jenkins, run Pandrillus, an excellent primate and forest non-profit working in southeast Nigeria and southwest Cameroon. They invited me to stay at their “ranch” to help care for orphaned chimpanzees and drill monkeys. After several months on my own in Africa and having lost 20 pounds, looking after cute young chimpanzees and eating real food (Liza is a great cook) was a refreshing and welcome opportunity.

John-O in the Afi Mountains in 1992. Peter and Liza fed me enough hearty dinners to restore some weight. In exchange I diapered sick and remarkably manipulative young chimpanzees and hand-fed palm-size infant drills that looked like miniature aliens. All the primates cared for by Pandrillus, orphans of the bushmeat trade, get medical care and live with same-species friends in enormous enclosures. After a few weeks of rest and volunteering, I decided to leave my simian friends and continue my jaunt through Africa. Peter and Liza suggested that if I wanted to see a rainforest, I should go to the Afi Mountains, a few hours’ drive north. The Afi Mountains marked a major frontier of deforestation. To the west there were few forests left; most had been cut to feed Nigeria’s growing rural population. To the east, toward Cameroon, there were still plenty of forests, though they too were being exploited fast. Nigeria’s Afi Mountains had key outposts of chimpanzee, gorilla, and elusive drill monkey populations. I caught a lift to the village of Buanchor , a relatively remote village of the Boki tribe. Buanchor, nestled under the Afi mountains, was a colorful and rowdy town, with dozens of chiefs, all whom wore red hats.
The Jeep ride into the Afi Mountains in 1992. Photo by John O. Niles. The next morning, having hired guides and met some of Buanchor’s chiefs, I journeyed into my first rainforest. I hadn’t taken more than a few steps into the forest when I stopped, threw off my pack, and then just plain threw up. Months of dysentery and amoebas, some palm wine the night before and a breakfast of fried yams and kola nuts took their toll. The guides were clearly curious about this hairy white guy losing his guts within minutes of what was to be a several-day excursion. Despite my flawed first yards in a rainforest, after a few days of trekking around the majestic and primitive mountains, I was hooked. The rainforest was disorienting, amazing, and completely wild and strange to this Vermonter. The sense of adventure sneaking through a jungle and stalking distant ancestors is beyond description. During the day the jungle’s air glowed green. At night unseen animals joined together in a cacophony of wild sounds that rose and fell in a disorienting and muddled unison. There was a religious sense of awe from the intertwined trees that towered above me. We spent a few days scrambling up and down mountains, calling to attract duikers (small African antelope), reading animal clues, and eating sardines and hard bread in caves. It was during a lunch break, when I heard my first stories about Udoga, a famous hunter who wore only a loin cloth and caught everything from bush rats to gorillas. Since that fateful trip to the Afi Mountains, I have spent most my life trying to do something positive for tropical forests. This has included several return trips to Nigeria (where I lived with a growing ranch of chimpanzees and worked beside the former hunter Udoga), as well as writing academic articles, helping diplomats, leading an effort to create global forestry projects standards, and starting a non-profit to support forestry projects in post-conflict zones. And this year, for the first time in decades, I have a sense of hope. The world seems to finally recognize the severe human and environmental costs of tropical deforestation. Ambitious plans are being assembled to provide massive new support for tropical countries to rein in the devastation.

Tropical Deforestation

The village of Buanchor, Nigeria, underneath the Afi Mountains. Photo by John O. Niles. Every year, tens of millions of acres of tropical forests are destroyed. This is the most destabilizing human land-use phenomenon on Earth. Tropical forests store more aboveground carbon than any other biome. They harbor more species than all other ecosystems combined. Tropical forests modulate global water, air, and nutrient cycles. They influence planetary energy flows and global weather patterns. Tropical forests provide livelihoods for many of the world’s poorest, most marginalized people. Drugs for cancer, malaria, glaucoma, and leukemia are derived from rainforest compounds. Despite all these immense values, tropical forests are vanishing faster than any other natural system. No other threat to human welfare has been so clearly documented and simultaneously left unchecked. Since the 1992 Rio Earth Summit (when more than 100 heads of State gathered to pledge a green future) 500 million acres of tropical forests have been cut or burned. For decades, tropical deforestation has been the No. 1 cause of species extinctions and the No. 2 cause of human greenhouse gas emissions, after the burning of fossil fuels. For decades, a few conservation heroes tried their best to plug holes in the dikes, but by and large the most diverse forests on Earth were in serious decline. In short, until very recently there has been no concerted effort to tackle what is arguably the most acute threat to Earth’s ecological integrity. Developing countries had other priorities. Conservation can rarely compete financially against putting in a soy bean crop or palm oil plantation, or selling trees, or growing coffee, or raising cattle. Wealthy countries were spending substantially more on toothpaste than on trying to save magnificent tropical forest ecosystems.

A New Plan


Some of the Boki people in Buanchor, Nigeria. Photo by John O. Niles.

And then in 2005, a small group of countries changed everything. Papua New Guinea teamed up with Costa Rica and a handful of other countries to make a formal plea to the United Nations. Their request was simple—if developing countries can credibly reduce rates of deforestation and the associated CO2 emissions, the countries should get paid. This band of countries, organized as the Coalition for Rainforest Nations, was even more specific. They asserted that tropical nations should get lucrative carbon credits for each ton of CO2 that otherwise would have been emitted because of deforestation. The global market for carbon credits was worth tens of billions of dollars, so tying rainforest protection to carbon finance would raise vast new sums to conserve tropical forests. Since almost 20 percent of greenhouse gas emissions are from tropical land-use change, and with growing concern about global warming, other countries began to listen. Since 2005, the concept of paying countries to conserve their forests and reduce global warming has been dubbed by diplomats as reducing emissions from deforestation in developing countries, or REDD. REDD is a bold and evolving plan to radically slow the pace of CO2 emissions by offering hefty incentives for developing countries to stem deforestation. Instead of a couple hundred million dollars per year in conservation charity, billions of dollars in carbon credits could be spent to curtail logging, stop agriculture expansion, or in other ways prevent forests from getting knocked down or set on fire.

Afi Mountain forests. Photos by Pandrillus.

REDD is also an incredibly risky gamble. The whole plan relies on resolving gaping problems in forest tenure and governance, technological capacities, and regulatory oversight. In many countries it is not obvious who has rights over a forest. And nowhere in the world are there clear answers to the trickier question of who has rights to the carbon stored in the trees. Another key challenge is the need for a new, uniform way of “interlocking” satellite data with tree measurements taken from forests around the world. We can tell reasonably well from space where and when forests are cleared. Not so well understood is how much carbon is stored in a particular forest and how much is oxidized upon deforestation. In addition to issues of rights and technologies, new global institutions are needed to make this REDD plan work. And even with all these pieces in place, REDD assumes that appropriate price signals for saving trees will make a real difference on the ground in forest communities. This is a huge leap of faith, given that many developing countries currently deforesting have only loose control over vast areas of their land. There are also huge political differences about the ideal way to design a new REDD system of forest conservation payments. What is amazing is that, despite these challenges, some of the brightest conservation minds on the planet, and most governments, now believe that this so-called REDD plan is the best shot for saving millions of acres of tropical forests. REDD has inspired a whole new cadre of optimistic, creative, and determined people who are self-organizing to stop tropical deforestation. Non-profits, forest communities, governors, presidents, consultants, and scientists are working to usher in this ground-breaking plan for saving rainforests. Others are equally determined to prevent a REDD fiasco, citing the problems already noted with particular concerns about REDD’s impact on indigenous peoples and on the global price of emitting carbon dioxide.

Healthy forest and recently cleared forest adjacent to Tanjung Puting National Park in Kalimantan (Indonesian Borneo). Photos Rhett Butler

But for now, the overwhelming momentum points to several new policy mechanisms that would pay developing countries that can demonstrate credible drops in deforestation rates and carbon emissions. The idea of using carbon finance to pay for reductions in deforestation has been introduced in United States legislation (in a bill that passed the House of Representatives as well as in earlier Senate bills) and in the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change. In other words, REDD proposals are moving ahead in the two mega-forums that matter when it comes to climate change policy. What is left to decide now are the details. As in all things, the details will make a huge difference as to whether REDD will succeed or fail. My future Mongabay.com commentaries will investigate the details, disagreements, and developments of emerging REDD policy proposals. I’ll also explore how the concept of REDD got started in the “voluntary carbon” markets and how proposed policies could dramatically hurt or help these early efforts to make saving tropical forests more profitable than tearing them down. With the United States and the United Nations scrambling to complete new agreements to limit greenhouse gas emissions, this year will be monumental for climate change and tropical forests, one way or another. So far, the signs are dramatically positive but there are many obstacles yet to overcome.

John-O Niles is the Director of the Tropical Forest Group, a non-profit that "catalyzes policy, science and advocacy to conserve and restore the planet’s remaining tropical forests."This is the first in a series of tropical forest policy commentaries John-O Niles will be writing for Mongabay.com leading up to the December U.N. climate meeting in Copenhagen.

Senin, 29 Juni 2009

Ekowisata Malinau

Pesona Wisata dan Budaya Malinau

Mohamad Rayan. Klipping

Rosdianah Dewi
Air Panas Semolon, salah satu kekayaan alam yang belum tereksplorasi denga baik. Air panas tersebut berlokasi di Kabupaten Malinau, Kalimantan Timur
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Minggu, 28 Juni 2009 11:44 WIB
JAKARTA, KOMPAS.com - Selama ini dunia intenasional hanya mengenal Bali sebagai salah satu tujuan utama pariwisata mereka. Padahal Indonesia tidak hanya Bali, masih banyak tempat-tempat lain yang memilki keindahan alam yang tak kalah cantiknya dengan Bali.
Salah satu derah yang juga tak kalah eksotisnya adalah, Kabupaten Malinau, Kalimantan Timur. Malinau merupakan kabupaten terbesar di Kalimantan Timur dan berbatasan langsung dengan Serawak, Malaysia.

Untuk memperkenalkan keindahan alam yang ada di Malinau kepada masyarakat luas, Pemerintah daerah kabupaten Malinau, Minggu ( 28/6 )menggelar pesona wisata dan kebudayaan Kabupaten Malinau, di Anjungan Kalimantan Timur, Taman Mini Indonesia Indah.
M. Peter Yadi, PLT Kabag Humas dan Protokol Pemda Kabupaten Malinau, menerangkan, acara tersebut juga sejalan dengan program pemda Kalimantan Timur yang belum lama ini mencanangkan Visit East Borneo.

"Dalam acara ini, akan ditampilkan tari-tarian khas Malinau yang kesemua penarinya didatangkan langsung dari Malinau. Selain itu, ada juga stan yang menjual produk-produk khas Malinau, seperti tas rajutan, keripik buah, sampai madu asli Malinau," terang Peter, saat di temui di Ajungan Kalimantan Timur, TMII, Jakarta, Minggu ( 28/6 ). Pada pagelaran tersebut, hadir juga Bupati Malinau, Martin Bila , dan beberapa Duta Besar dari negara sahabat.

Acara tersebut juga dimaksudkan untuk memperkenalkan berbagai pariwisata alam yang dimiliki oleh kabupaten Malinau, seperti arus liar yang ada di sungai sungai tugu dan sungai Bahaowulu, air terjun Martin Bila, air panas Semolon. "Masyarakat dapat melihat rumah adat asli dari masyarakat Malinau atau biasa di sebut Lamin Adat. Ada juga kuburan batu yang sudah ada beratus-ratus tahun lalu," ujarnya.

Selain itu, kata Peter, karena Malinau satu-satu kabupaten yang memproklamirkan diri sebagai kapubaten konservasi, dengan demikian wisatawan dapat menikmati berbagai kekayaan flora dan fauna yang tidak dimiliki daerah lain. "Ada juga tempat penelitian laut Birai, tempat penelitian flora dan fauan Kain mentarang," terangnya.
Peter menerangkan untuk saat ini, jumlah wisatawan yang datang masih sangat sedikit. "Kebanyakan adalah peneliti asing, sekitar 20 orang pertahun. Sedangkan untuk wisatan domestik lebih sedikit lagi," ujarnya.

Hal tersebut, lanjutnya, disebabkan membutuhkan waktu yang lama untuk sampai di Malinau, terlebih jika melalui jalur darat. "Kalau dari bandara Internasional di Balik Papan, kita harus transit dulu di Tarakan baru melanjutkan dengan pesawat kecil. Kalau melalui jalur darat, dari ibu kota propinsi butuh waktu 24 jam. Dan itu juga harus menggunakan jalur off road," lontar dia.

Dengan digelarnya acara ini, Peter mewakili Pemda Kabupaten Malinau berharap, semakin banyak pengunjung yang datang ke Malinau, ia juga menghimbau agar pemerintah pusat lebih memperhatikan kekayaan yang ada di Malinau. "Malinau mempunyai nilai ekonomis yang tinggi, jika dieksplorasi lagi akan banyak membawa keuntungan bagi banyak pihak," tandasnya.

Selasa, 23 Juni 2009

Claiming village traditional forest, two ethnic Dayak closed to clashing

Mohamad Rayan. Translator.

Rakyat Merdeka. February 2007

Due to the boundary claimed as traditional land, two villages were in the brink of clashing that is Respen Tubu village and Sentaban, East Kalimantan.

Even, the village clash did not happened, the punching of one of the village resident in the dispute did occur at the traditional leaders meeting of the two villagers on Friday 9 February 2007.

Because of the punching, the victim brought to clinic Mentarang due to bleeding nose. Even though there was agreement for both villagers to keep emotion down during the meeting. It was also suggested by both village leaders to keep calm.

Traditional leader of Dayak Merau, Atong Aran with one resident said the problem aroused out of unhappiness of their group due to the boundary of the forest claimed by them. “This disputed boundary claimed as traditional forest is in the area of PT Batu Karang Sakti. They (Seturan 4 dayak ethnicities) thought the decision to allow the logging company to operate in the traditional forest is only one ethnicities (Punan) without telling the other ethnicities.”

“This decision is only by one ethnicity only, but actually there are (in Seturan) ethnicities dayak of Abay, Merap, Merau, Bilau and Punan, they are all related.”

Feeling that the decision on allowing the company is done by one ethnicity, the other ethnicities are not approving. According to Atong Aran, they are requesting that the other 4 ethnicities be involved with in every decision on traditional people rights.

They also acknowledged that before the logging company entered to location, village residents never received the explanation on the planning of the company going to the community traditional forest.

“At the beginning there was no notification to us. May be the company only informed only the undeveloped ethnic Punan” explained Atong Aran.

That is why from 4 ethnicities lived in Sentaban village, expecting this problem be resolved in family spirit.

If it cannot be solved in this meeting now, they suggest the company which is operating now be terminated temporarily until there is agreement.

“We are not expecting the community be suffering and became victims. If the problem is between community and the government, or the community and the company, the conflict is still resolvable. But if the conflict happened between communities, it could end up in chasing each other and caused the riot like yesterday, he said”

Budiansyah, the representative of PT BKS conceded that it has informed the community including government before operating.

However, after 3 months in operation, there is new problem from a group of claiming the area as their area.

He was also present as a good listener on this conflict of area ownership by several groups who are claiming and counter-claiming with the size of the area is 47.000 ha. Budiansyah is also looking for the truth.

“We have done a socialisation to one of the village at the district government, however other community complained on this problem.

The complainers had also reported the case to sub district Police for requesting to organize a meeting and in that meeting i will be present for finding which party is the right one,” said Budiansyah when questioned in the front of Mentarang sub district police station Friday 9 January 2007.

Meanwhile the acting sub district head, Marson R Langub after leading a meeting from the two disputing group confessed still confused. Ida/jpnn

Sumber: http://www.rakyatmerdeka.co.id/indexframe.php?url=nusantara/index.php?q=news&id=4460

Translated by Rayan 23 June 2009.

Dayak, Ethnicities and Conflicts

Mohamad Rayan. Reporting.


Malinau. Simmering under the surface in Malinau is fragile ethnicities relationship. This is latest update report from the conservation district. It would not be a long report.



Well, it started as usual when Marcus and i came to ask the question on any conflicts with the neighbouring villages, the Setarap leader confessed that they have problems with Setulang village and Punan Setarap. Couple days later Setulang leaders informed me that they are having negotiation meeting on disputed area for farming with Setarap residents. The disputed area issue is not resolved yet. The area is disputed due to the fact there will be a palm oil plantation planning to open near the disputed area. This will be reported in the next report in Konservasiindonesia (KI).


Actually the report by Cifor on their study of village boundary couple years ago before they ceased program in Malinau, there always be potential conflicts on the ground. And at the core of the conflict normally there is issue of economic interest such when mining or logging company wanted to open the operation in an area.


In this desk report, i would just paste the translation i did from a newspaper article in February 2007 below and previous article in KI.


Claiming village traditional forest, two ethnic Dayak closed to clashing

Mohamad Rayan. Translator.

Rakyat Merdeka. February 2007


Due to the boundary claimed as traditional land, two villages were in the brink of clashing that is Respen Tubu village and Sentaban, East Kalimantan.

Even, the village clash did not happened, the punching of one of the village resident in the dispute did occur at the traditional leaders meeting of the two villagers on Friday 9 February 2007.

Because of the punching, the victim brought to clinic Mentarang due to bleeding nose. Even though there was agreement for both villagers to keep emotion down during the meeting. It was also suggested by both village leaders to keep calm.

Traditional leader of Dayak Merau, Atong Aran with one resident said the problem aroused out of unhappiness of their group due to the boundary of the forest claimed by them. “This disputed boundary claimed as traditional forest is in the area of PT BKS. They (Seturan 4 dayak ethnicities) thought the decision to allow the logging to operate in the traditional forest is only one ethnicities (Punan) without telling the other ethnicities.”

“This decision is only by one ethnicity only, but actually there are (in Seturan) ethnicities dayak of Abay, Merap, Merau, Bilau and Punan, they are all related.”

Feeling that the decision on allowing the company is done by one ethnicity, the other ethnicities are not approving. According to Atong Aran, they are requesting that the other 4 ethnicities be involved with in every decision on traditional people rights.

They also acknowledged that before the logging company entered to location, village residents never received the explanation on the planning of the company going to the community traditional forest.

“At the beginning there was no notification to us. May be the company only informed only the undeveloped ethnic Punan” explained Atong Aran.
That is why from 4 ethnicities lived in Sentaban village, expecting this problem be resolved in family spirit.

If it cannot be solved in this meeting now, they suggest the company which is operating now be terminated temporarily until there is agreement.


“We are not expecting the community be suffering and became victims. If the problem is between community and the government, or the community and the company, the conflict is still resolvable. But if the conflict happened between communities, it could end up in chasing each other and caused the riot like yesterday, he said”

Budiansyah, the representative of PT BKS conceded that it has informed the community including government before operating.

However, after 3 months in operation, there is new problem from a group of claiming the area as their area.

He was also present as a good listener on this conflict of area ownership by several groups who are claiming and counter-claiming with the size of the area is 47.000 ha. Budiansyah is also looking for the truth.

“We have done a socialisation to one of the village at the district government, however other community complained on this problem.

The complainers had also reported the case to sub district Police for requesting to organize a meeting and in that meeting i will be present for finding which party is the right one,” said Budiansyah when questioned in the front of Mentarang sub district police station Friday 9 January 2007.

Meanwhile the acting sub district head, Marson R Langub after leading a meeting from the two disputing group confessed still confused. Ida/jpnn


Sumber: http://www.rakyatmerdeka.co.id/indexframe.php?url=nusantara/index.php?q=news&id=4460



Translated by Rayan 23 June 2009.

Senin, 22 Juni 2009

Story of Viat

Mohamad Rayan, Malinau

The story of viat began when Marcus and i went visiting Punan Setarap village at the beginning of the end of May 2009. it was a hot day when we arrive at the village. We were accompany by Long Kebinu resident who stirred the Ketingting for us to reach Setarap and Punan setarap villages.


In Setarap village we did our routine survey of the village demography. It was normal answers we receive from them on population, on education, on health, on diet, on livelihoods, logging activities, on occupation, on village harmony etc, etc, etc.

On the issue of border harmony, they explained that they informed us that some of their old residents decided to move out and set their own village. Since most of deciding to move out are of the Punan dayak ethnicities, hence the village is known Punan setarap village. According to Setarap leader, they decide to move to have more independence in managing themselves.

We walked along Punan Setarap people and asked for the residence of the head of the village. Several Punan kids pointed to the house on the top of the hill. Yes, most of the village in Malinau are built along Malinau river in East Kalimantan. And Punan Setarap is in the top of the hill.


We were welcomed by the head of the village, Alan Laing. His father is Ruit Laing as the traditional village leader. He was 1.60 metres or less and his physic fits to its height. He was open but reserved in answering our questions. Mind you he is getting nearly 200 questions from us.


May be from the name, we would guess they are already modernised. Yes, they have TV and with satelite dishes. However the village only have two generators to bring electricity to the village.

On the question of their name, ah, what is in the name. The dayak now have modern name such as Marcus, Ramses, Dany etc because the Protestant missionary had been here since 1960s maybe since the Dutch colonilization time. Beside the Protestant, there is also Catholic among Dayak population in Malinau.


In Punan Setarap the village we visited, there exists only Catholic Church catering for 187 people. There is a primary school with local teacher only.

Not long, his wife brought the coffee out to us. The coffee is the harvest from their own farm. Their ladang is across the river. Marcus loved the coffee. It seems coffee fits to the climate and easy to plant and not too much maintainance. It could be argued the coffee introduction by government for livelihoods is a success story.


Toward the end of discussion, Mr. Alan Laing, told us the story of Viat. It is a creature of tiger look alike. Marcus was startled and wanted to know more. It could be a finding like they were finding Pygmy Elephants. The Viat is siluman, changing form. It could be human look alike and could also be tiger look alike.

Is there Viat? I wonder.

Rayan in Malinau


Pembantain Orangutan di Kalimantan

Pembatain Orangutan

Mohamad Rayan M.Ec

Pembantaian Orangutan menjadi berita besar di London, Inggris. Berita ini dimuat oleh Koran Inggris, Daily Exprees, UK pada tanggal 28 Mei 2009.

Dalam laporan itu diberitakan pembantain orangutan di Indonesia terutama di Kalimantan. Adapun aktor pembantaian adalah pembuka-pembuka lahan untuk perkebunan kelapa sawit yang berlebihan. Dengan proses yang tidak terkontrol ini dalam satu dekade kedepan orang-utan akan punah. Pembuka lahan membunuh orangutan karena dianggap sebagai hama penganggu.

Didalam berita itu juga digambarkan keserakaan pemangku kepentingan (stakeholder) dalam membuka lahan kelapa sawit. Adapun argumennya adalah sebenarnya kelapa sawit bisa ditanam dilahan yang sudah rusak atau bekas HPH, namun hampir semua izin pembukaan lahan kelapa sawit di berikan di daerah yang masih ada hutan alam.

Jelas keserakaan untuk mengambil keuntungan y ang berlebihan dalam proses pembukaan lahan perkebunan kelapa sawit ini. Dengan membuka lahan dari hutan alam si pengusaha mendapatkan kayu yang hampir ratusan tahun umurnya dipotong dan dijual untuk produk kayu. Kiat lama yang dipakai baron kayu ketika pada zaman order baru. Rupanya kiat ini masih berlangsung. Pasti semua kebagian toh. Malah lebih serakah lagi, setelah diambil kayunya, perkebunan ditinggal. Inilah yang menyebabkan pembantaian orangutan yang tinggal dihutan alam dan hutan hujan tropis.

Hutan hujan tropis penting untuk menyealamatkan orang-utan terutama hutan tropis di Kalimantan dimana 90% orang-utan masih hidup. Selain intu hutan hujan tropis penting untuk menjaga kesehatan planet bumi. Hutan ini mecegah pemanasan bumi dengan mengabsorbsi karbondioksida, bagian penting dari siklus air dan pencegah kekeringan. Di hutan hujan tropis ada juga 420 spesies burung, 210 mamalia, 254 reptilia dan 368 jenis ikan airtawar.

Jumlah populasi orang-utan menurut data Direktorat Perlindungan Hutan dan konservasi Alam diperkirakan ada 61,234. Dari jumlah tersebut 54,567 hidup di Pulau Kalimantan dan 6,667 di pulau Sumatera. Lebih rinci lagi ada 4,825 orangutan di Kaltim, 31,300 di Kalteng, 7,425 di Kalbar, Serawak dan Sabah. Di Sumatera, orangutan ada 43 di Seulawah, 103 Aceh Barat, Aceh Timur (337), Leuser Barat (2,508), Sidiangkat (134), Leuser Timur(1,042), Tripa (280), Trumon-Singkil (1,500), Rawa Singkil Timur (160), Batang Toru Barat (400) dan Sarulla Timur(150).

Willie Smits, pendiri Borneo Orang-utan Survival foundation, telah menampung 1000 orangutan di pusat rehabilitasi orang-utan. Orangutan yang ditampung adalah korban dari pembukaan perkebunanan kelapa sawit di Kalimantan. Industri kelapa sawit dunia beromsetkan 14 miliar poundsterling.

Lone droscher-nielsen, salah satu pejuang orang-utan, mantan pramugari Swiss Airline SAS menjaga 600 orangutan di Nyaru meneteng Centre di Kalteng. Lone mengatakan akibat pembukaan lahan kelapa sawit, setiap 30 detik hutan hujan tropis dibabat sebesar satu lapangan bola. Seabad lalu ada 300,000 orang utan, dalam sepuluh tahun kedepan mereka akan punah.
Dalam memitigasi kemusnahan orang-utan, pemerintah telah merencanakan beberapa program.

Program-program tersebut adalah pendidikan konservasi, penelitian mengenai konservasi orangutan yang berkesinambungan, meningkatkan kerjasama dengan masyarakat lingkungan, membentuk forum untuk memonitor penegakan peraturan, pengaturan penebangan pada habitat orangutan, mengeluarkan undang-undang melarang pertambangan di kawasan habitat orangutan dan penegakan hukum dan patroli melawan penyeledup satwa seperi di laporkan di Koran The Jakarta Post tanggal 13 Juni 2008. Semuakan akan dicapai pada tahun 2017. Rencana memang bagus tapi kenyataanya kita tunggu.

Salam Konservasiindonesia

Sabtu, 20 Juni 2009

A Green Policy for Aceh

A green policy for Aceh

The Jakarta Post , Jakarta Thu, 06/14/2007 9:21 AM Opinion
Mohamad Rayan, Banda Aceh, Aceh

Aceh Governor Irwandi Jusuf declared a moratorium on logging on June 6 as part of efforts to develop a new long-term forest management strategy.

This is first installment for his environment policy -- and it's definitely a big chunk of it.
Furthermore, his environment policy is a part his economic policy.

The moratorium means logging will cease for a certain period of time in the province.
But can the policy be sustainable amid such high demands for woods and in light of the massive reconstruction project taking place in the province?
And what about community needs for wood?
Who is policing the moratorium?
Or what about the livelihoods of the community close to the forest?

On one hand, the moratorium is a brave, innovative and made with strong political will.
But on the other hand, the governor has not published his environment policy because the other side of the coin is the exploration and exploitation of natural resources outside the forest.
The reasons given for the long-term forest management policy include the disasters caused by unchecked forest exploitation.

Unchecked forest exploitation has caused flooding and land slides and has resulted in a spate of incidents involving angry animals.

Given these reasons, the moratorium is much-needed.
The moratorium can be divided into three strategic plans.

First is the redesign and evaluation of the forest areas and the logging permits.
This will need the revision of spatial management to be in line with projected needs around sustainable development.

And these needs should incorporate social, economic and ecological issues.
The permits will be reviewed for size and concession and this means there will be rationalization for the forest industry.

The industry needs to adjust to the availability of raw materials.
The industry also has to develop non-wood products.
The second strategic plan should involve reforestation to uplift the rehabilitation of the forest and its resources.

And to manage this reforestation, the government will need to find funds to carry out the tasks.
The third strategic plan is a reduction on the rate of deforestation.

The first step here is law enforcement. Then the government needs to put a system in place for the protection of the forest -- and that system must be efficient and effective.

These three strategic plans make up part the master plan for the management of Aceh's forests.
The governor however is yet to issue a more comprehensive environment policy.

Aceh has three percent of Indonesia's forests and water, where 55 percent are protected forests, 25 percent are conserved forests and 20 percent are production forests.
Aceh needs a system for environmental protection. But any policy should fully involve the people.

A policy without involving the local community will stop halfway.
For instance, the governor's moratorium on logging did make media headlines, but a couple months after the announcement, the logging will probably start again.

Without significant compensation, people will be tempted to take short cuts and they will practice illegal logging again -- especially if there is good money in it.
According to local conservation NGO Walhi Aceh, illegal logging destroyed an area four times the size of Singapore between 2005 and 2006.

This will continue without an environment policy that includes community participation and involvement.
The Aceh governor believes high economic growth can be achieved with direct foreign investment.

And there have been many countries such as Malaysia, Korea, United States, Thailand and Sweden who have expressed an interest in investing in the province.
In the exploration and the exploitation of mining, Walhi Aceh recorded 14 coal mining companies in the area of Nagan Raya, West Aceh and Aceh Jaya.

The area of exploration has been recorded at 92.034 ha, with 17 gold mining companies exploring the area of Nagan raya, South Aceh, West Aceh, Aceh Jaya and Pidie.
And with the opening of more palm oil plantations as well as other plantations and resources explorations, a comprehensive environment is urgently needed.

But how can conservation bring revenue to the government? The way to do it is to link the environment policy to the international environment issues and protocol.
Through its governor, Aceh can sell the conservation of the protected forest and other conserved forest in exchange for the global funds for the program.
So the moratorium of all logging is just the beginning.

The writer is Aceh specialist and Provincial Program Manager UNFPA-NAD.This is a private opinion

Jumat, 19 Juni 2009

Massacre of Orangutans.

MASSACRE OF THE APES

Daily Express U.K

Monday May 18,2009
By Nigel Blundell

DESPITE a new population of orang-utans being found in Indonesia recently conservationists believe these amazing creatures could be wiped out within a decade thanks to the £14bn palm oil industry .

We find it in bread, cereals and cakes, chocolates and frozen foods, even in soap powder. Soon we will be urged to run our cars on it. The ingredient is palm oil. it is the cheapest form of cooking oil and, since it is also being hailed as the biofuel of the future, it’s a worldwide growth industry beyond compare. But though the cost seems cheap the true price being paid is devastation on an unprecedented scale.

Such is the race to clear the land for palm oil plantations that entire rain forests are doomed – along with the animals that live in them. it is no longer scare-mongering to forecast that the orang-utan, one of man’s closest cousins, will be wiped out in the wild within a decade. “It’s not just cruel it’s criminal,” says Faith Doherty, a senior campaigner for the UK-based environmental investigation Agency (EIA).

“The last strong-holds of Asia’s only great ape are being devastated by loggers and plantation owners, many of whom are acting illegally and out of sheer greed. We as consumers bear some responsibility for that”.

‘They’re so much like us yet we’re wiping them out’

So in a supreme irony the drive to save the world from global warming by promoting palm oil is actually helping destroy it. The part of the globe that is moving most swiftly to supply us with the oil is indonesia and Malaysia. The result is that within 15 years only two per cent of the rainforests of those nations will be left.

Long before the rainforests vanish so will some of the world’s most important wildlife species. These include the Asian elephant, the Sumatran tiger and the orang-utan, which shares 97 per cent of human DNA. These red-haired “people of the forest”, as the natives call them, are under tremendous pressure through habitat loss because the lowland jungles where they live have been the first to go. Plantation owners kill them as pests

because they eat their plants and poachers hunt them for bush meat and sell the young as pets. And while last month’s discovery of 219 orang-utan nests in a remote corner of indonesia have given a rare boost to the endangered species, there is little hope of reversing the situation. “in reality it’s already over for the orang-utan,” says Willie Smits, who has fought to save the creatures for 20 years. “Their entire lowland forest habitat is gone and now the hunters have moved in we find their corpses decapitated or burned. Hunters are paid the equivalent of £8 for the right hand of an orang-utan to prove they’ve killed them.” Willie, founder of the largest primate rescue organisation in the world, Borneo Orang-utan Survival foundation, runs two centres housing 1,000 of the creatures, most rescued from palm oil plantations.

But once rehabilitated they cannot be released into the wild as it is not safe. Another orang-utan saviour, Lone droscher-nielsen, has been forced to relocate her centre’s creatures to a remote island to save them from annihilation. She says: “This is orang-utan genocide. They are among our closest relatives yet we humans are killing them by the thousand. If only people in the West could understand what is happening here in Borneo. The demand for palm oil is devastating the rainforests, which are being destroyed at the rate of one football field every 30 seconds.”

Rainforests are vital for the planet’s health. They curb global warming by absorbing carbon dioxide and, being an important part of the water cycle, prevent droughts. They shelter 420 species of bird, 210 species of mammal, 254 species of reptile and 368 species of freshwater fish. Lone, who quit her job as an air hostess to join Borneo Orang-utan Survival foundation, has 600 orang-utans in her care at the Nyaru Menteng centre. “Most of those we take in are orphans whose mothers have been slaughtered by palm oil planters,” she says. “Orang-utans are so much like us. They are highly intelligent, can solve simple problems and there is an immensely strong bond between mother and child that lasts for the first eight years of a baby’s life. Yet we are allowing them to be wiped out. A century ago there were 300,000 Bornean orang-utans. If nothing is done there will not be a single one left in the wild within five to 10 years. Yet demand for palm oil grows. Is nobody listening?” Lone’s dedication to the orang-utans began 14 years ago while she was a flight attendant with Swiss airline SAS. She only intended to be a short-term volunteer but became so fascinated with the animals that in 1993 she moved to Borneo permanently. “I fell in love with them,” she says. “So much so that I have abandoned any wish to have my own children.” Her centre in Central Kalimantan (Indonesian Borneo) has rehabilitated hundreds of orphans. It is run like a kinder garten because newcomers need 24-hour care. Lone employs 80 Indonesians, women as “babysitters” for infants and men caring for the older orphans. The aim of the project is to hone the animals’ survival skills.

Butsince there are no longer safe areas of the forest in which to free them funds were raised to buy a 100-acre offshore sanctuary, to which the young are introduced at the age of eight in batches of about 25. Their first faltering steps, filmed for the recent Animal Planet TV series Orang-utan Island are a glimmer of hope for the creatures. But Lone concedes that their island existence is only “semi wild”. It is too small to be a full-scale sanctuary and the orang-utans there will have to be closely monitored. The fact that they can no longer roam freely is purely down to the palm oil boom. The tragedy in the view of conservationists is that the devastation of the jungle for the creation of the palm oil plantations is unnecessary. “There is no need for continual destruction of the rainforests,” says Lone.

“There is already open grass- land that can be used for this purpose. But we need pressure from the international community to tackle a problem that will ultimately affect every human being on earth. We must not give up the fight to protect the rainforests, the orang utans and, ultimately, ourselves. “Consumers can play their part by putting pressure on companies that use palm oil in their products and persuading them to source oil which has been produced by environmentally-friendly methods.” According to recent findings the UK is now Europe’s biggest importer of palm oil. Manufacturers use the ingredient (usually labelled as “vegetable oil”) to bind and bulk out chocolate, biscuits, bread and spreads. Palm oil is a £14billion global industry and an international organisation has been set up to try to ensure that manufacturers use oil that comes only from “sustainable” plantations.

Yet the Roundtable On Sustainable Palm Oil certifies only four per cent of world production as being “sustainable”. The rest comes from the destruction of rainforests. More than 30million tons a year – about 85 per cent of the global supply – is exported from the vast islands of Borneo and Sumatra, which form parts of Indonesia and Malaysia. Conservationists believe the rush to create this “green fuel” is often an excuse for loggers to make a quick killing. The hardwood trees are felled, the timber sold and the palm oil is merely an after-thought. The corruption behind this land grab is rife and timber barons will go to any lengths to protect their illegal trade. The EIA’s Faith Doherty was kidnapped and beaten during a mission to expose them. She was seized at gunpoint nine years ago in Tanjung Puting National Park, central Kalimantan. It is supposed to be a safe haven for orang-utans but she discovered illegal logging in the park. “That shows the power of the timber barons,” she says. “It is incredibly dangerous to investigate them. I was on an undercover mission when I was kidnapped, held for four days and beaten up.

My fingers were broken and I had a gun to my head as they ordered me to retract an EIA report I had made about their activities. I refused and was lucky to be freed. It was no use looking to the police for help, they were in cahoots. That’s the problem: bad governments and corruption right down the chain. “The land turned over to palm oil plantation owners is supposed to be ‘degraded land’. They’re not even supposed to be in the rainforest at all. What they’re doing is quite simply illegal. It is a crime that the orang-utans are under serious threat and if we don’t act now we’ll lose them forever.” To learn about the orang-utans’ plight visit www.eia-international.com, www.savetheorangutan.org.uk and www.wspa.org.uk

Kamis, 18 Juni 2009

Dayak Diet Caused Orangutan Extinct in Malinau

Mohamad Rayan. Malinau.


Dayak eats orangutan! Sure, who said that i questioned him. He answered i tell you the story.


Marcus and i had been in the field in Malinau for nearly 6 weeks. This is the first time we heard that Dayak eats orangutan. Our catch phrase before was "Punan eats everything". Dayak Punan stated to us that they eat every animals in their forest near Bintang mountain in Malinau. And we realized that there was no orangutan near Malinau city even Malinau district.


When we asked the questions what do they hunt for? The Punan Dayak in Punan Setarap village answered: bores, deer, bear, anteaters, porcupine etc. And then we asked do you eat monkeys. The answer yes, we eats monkeys. Wow, we said, interesting. It tasted ok. Yes.


Well, questioning Dayak community on the issue of what they hunt, how they gets their protein, it was always a suprise coming from the answers. The Punan Dayak is the most extreme on this habit of consuming animals. Kenyah people also revealed they enjoyed most of the animals in the forest, but the Kenyah are now more connected to the community and the development symbolized with the regent is from Dayak Kenyah line.


Kenyah, Lun Dayeh, Brusu, Long Alango etc consume most of the animals in the forest. They also do a lot fishing inside the forest in the creeks inside the forest with crystal clear water. With the clear water, it is easier for them to catch and fish the fish in the river.


This topic does have a big question to be answered, why was the orangutan disappeared from Malinau. Well, according to reports and ground check in community they have known, may be some of them tasted the meat of orangutan. So is it the dayak diet cauased the extinction of orangutan in Malinau? Or is it the disappearing forest of malinau? Or is it the topography of Malinau, which is hilly and mountainous.


The current orangutan population according to the directorate general for forest protection and nature conservation is believed to be 61,234, according to data from the directorate general. Most are found in the forests of Borneo (54,567), with the remainder in Sumatra (6,667). In Borneo, orangutans are found in East Kalimantan (4,825), Central Kalimantan (31,300), West Kalimantan including the neighboring Malaysian state of Sarawak (7,425) and the Malaysian state of Sabah (11,017). In Sumatra, orangutans are found in Seulawah (43), West Central Aceh (103), East Central Aceh (337), West Leuser (2,508), Sidiangkat (134), East Leyser (1,042), Tripa Swamp (280), Trumon-Singkil (1,500), East Rawa Singkil (160), West Batang Toru (400) and East Sarulla (150).


Kalimantan has been studied, surveyed and travelled by local scientists or international expert since 1800s. However, there was no study or firmed answer why there is no orangutan in Malinau. However, it was reported that a study suggested in Serawak, 10.000 years ago, it was found in the cave in Serawak bones of orangutan had been consumed by the human. It was also reported that the pigs is the most frequent animals eaten by homo sapiens. The book was written by Leobert E M De Boer in 1982. The title is The Orangutan, Its Biology and Conservation.


So in the question of is it the diet of Dayak caused the extinction of Orangutan, the answer could be yes. Iban tribe in Serawak, had the culture that is taboo to eat orangutan, then they still have the population of orangutan. So it could be the culture of eating orangutan causing the extinction of orangutan in Malinau.


In Aceh conflicts, there were a lot of orangutans are got shot intentionally or unintentionally, yet they still survived. So human conflicts or conflicts human and primate did not caused the extinction.

Climate is not possible causing the extinction of orangutan as proved by the finding of Black Orangutan in Sangkurilang in East Kalimantan."So yes, finding a population that science did not know about is significant, especially one of this size," Birute Mary Galdikas, a Canadian scientist said, noting that those found on the eastern part of the island represent a rare subspecies, the black Borneon orangutan, or Pongo pygmaeus morio.


The 700-square mile (2,500-square kilometer) jungle escaped the massive fires that devastated almost all of the surrounding forests in the late 1990s. The blazes were set by plantation owners and small-scale farmers and exacerbated by the El Nino droughts.Nardiyono, who headed The Nature Conservancy's weeklong survey in December, said "it could be the density is very high because after the fires, the orangutans all flocked to one small area" as reported in The Jakarta Post 14 April 2009. The area is high in the mountain near Sangkurilang, East Kalimantan. The finding also approved that temperature and topography of the area do not caused the extinction.


The post also reported that there are an estimated 50,000 to 60,000 orangutans left in the wild, 90 percent of them in Indonesia and the rest in neighboring Malaysia.The countries are the world's top producers of palm oil, used in food, cosmetics and to meet growing demands for "clean-burning" fuels in the U.S. and Europe. Rain forests, where the solitary animals spend almost all of their time, have been clear-cut and burned at alarming rates to make way for lucrative palm oil plantations.


The explanation of vegetation in Malinau caused the disappering of orangutan. It could not be used because the existence of orangutan in Kutai where they have same lowland as in Malinau lowland, there exists orangutan. However this opinion is being rejected by Toni Suhartono, director of biological diversity conservation at the Forestry Ministry. According to him that the habitat loss due to forest destruction was the main cause of the reduction in the numbers of orangutans, compounded by less significant factors such as human-animal conflicts as reported on The Jakarta Post 13 April 2009.

For orangutan experts, the cause of the extinction in the past, present and future is clear cut. “The last strong-holds of Asia’s only great ape are being devastated by loggers and plantation owners, many of whom are acting illegally and out of sheer greed. We as consumers bear some responsibility for that”says Faith Doherty, a senior campaigner for the UK-based environmental investigation Agency (EIA) in Daily Express on 28 May 2009.



So back to the beginning of the story, the statement "Dayak eats orangutan" was made by one of the officer working in Kayan Mentarang National Park (KMNP). He told us that they had a program of moving back orangutan to Malinau. The two places targeted was Rian Tubu, South West of Malinau city and in Long Alango, in the west of Malinau City.


After further study and discussion, they choosed Long Alango forest inside Kayan Mentarang National Park. However, to double check, the team from KMNP asked the community in Long Alango village for their opinion. And during that discussion, some of the community disagreed with the program by saying that they used to be orangutan in the area, then they were extinct becaused most of them were hunted and consumed. It became well sought and people competed hunting for them. At the end it can caused the conflict inside the community.



Based on that, they rejected the program of re-introduction of orangutan in Long Alango. The community beleives that the reintroduction of orangutan will make people competed again for the meat of orangutan. This will cause conflict and disharmony in the community. At the end the KMNP team decided to drop the program. That was the story told by Pak Bisnu, an official in KMNP. I beleive this is the reason why the animal extinct in Malinau. Dayak's diet caused the extinction of orangutan in Malinau or in Kalimantan in the future as one of the main factor.


On the brighter note the govenment had prepared programs to save the fate of orangutan. They include conservation education, research on sustainable orangutan conservation, improving cooperation with environmental groups, setting up a forum to monitor enforcement of regulations, arranging a logging schedule in orangutan habitat, issuing a law against mining in habitat areas, law enforcement and patrols against poachers as reported by The Jakarta Post 13 June 2008. All will be completed in 2017. It sounds good. We also hope it turns out to be good.

Rabu, 17 Juni 2009

Forest Carbon

Rich countries have ‘double duty’: Oxfam

Klipping: Mohamad Rayan

Adianto P. Simamora , The Jakarta Post , Jakarta Wed, 06/17/2009 9:11 AM National
With climate talks on financing methods remaining unsettled, Oxfam International proposed a non-market-based mechanism requiring rich nations to perform a “double duty”: Pay developing countries to mitigate climate change and cut their own greenhouse gas emissions.

Under Oxfam’s Global Mitigation and Finance Mechanism, recipient countries with a per capita purchasing power of less than US$1,000 a year have no binding targets to cut their emissions.
Oxfam predicted that rich nations should allocate at least $150 billion per year to fund climate change mitigation in developing countries, the main victims of the effects of global warming.

“It is a fair deal that when rich countries keep global warming below 2 degrees Celsius, they can also deliver resources to help the poor avoid the impact of climate change,” Rully Prayoga, Oxfam International climate campaigner for the East Asian region told reporters on Tuesday.

“Indonesia, with a per capita purchasing power of about $661 a year, should get full support from Global Mitigation and Finance Mechanism.”

Oxfam proposed the mechanism after climate negotiators remained in a deadlock on financial mechanism issues to fund the mitigation during the recent Bonn climate conference.
Rully said that the rich nations disagreed on whether a mitigation fund would also be allocated to rich oil countries in the Middle East.

“We offer a win-win solution to bridge the expected negotiation deadlock in the upcoming Copenhagen meeting in December. Hopefully, the Indonesian government can take the lead to push the concept to the negotiation table,” Rully said.

“An agreement struck at the UN climate conference in Copenhagen in just six months could pave way for a post-2012 climate regime that staves off catastrophic climate change.”
Under the Oxfam mechanism, the wealthier countries like Singapore and Qatar are not eligible to receive the fund.

But, China and India with its huge population living in poverty, should benefit from the Oxfam mechanism.

The rich nations, including the United States have repeatedly asked emerging nations like China, India and Brazil to have legally binding targets for emission cuts.
Under Oxfam’s mechanism, rich nations would need to reduce their emissions to at least 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2020.

The rich nations are currently required to cut about 5 percent of their greenhouse gas emissions from their 1990 levels to deal with climate change, as stipulated in the Kyoto Protocol.
The Kyoto Protocol however, allows developing countries to host green projects under the clean development mechanism (CDM) to help rich nations meet their binding targets.
Indonesia has about 100 CDM projects but only three of them can receive financing from rich nations.

The international community is currently discussing the forestry mechanism to deal with greenhouse gas emissions.

Under the reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD) scheme, Indonesia, as the world’s third-largest forest nation, is set to benefit greatly from carbon trading.
Oxfam’s analysis showed that more than 95 percent of industrialized countries failed to reach their emissions cut target.Under Oxfam’s mechanism, rich nations would need to reduce their emissions to at least 40 percent below 1990 levels by 2020.

Selasa, 16 Juni 2009

Kondisi Gunung Leuser

Perambah Taman Nasional Gunung Leuser Makin Banyak

Kliping: Mohamad Rayan
/

Selasa, 19 Mei 2009 17:44 WIB
Laporan wartawan KOMPAS Khaerudin
MEDAN, KOMPAS.com — Belum segera dilakukannya relokasi pengungsi di dalam Taman Nasional Gunung Leuser, membuat semakin banyak perambah yang mendatangi kawasan ini. Para perambah berlindung di balik keberadaan pengungsi yang mestinya sudah harus direlokasi ke Solok, Sumatera Barat.

Menurut Kepala Bidang Pengelolaan Taman Nasional Gunung Leuser (TNGL) Wilayah III Stabat Ari Subiantoro, pemerintah pusat dalam hal ini Departemen Kehutanan dan Kantor Kementerian Koordinator Kesejahteraan Rakyat masih belum memutuskan kapan pengungsi TNGL harus direlokasi.

Di sisi lain, menurut Ari, Pemerintah Kabupaten Solok, Sumatera Barat, sudah menyatakan kesediaannya menerima kedatangan 554 keluarga pengungsi yang sejak masa konflik Aceh menetap di dalam kawasan TNGL.

Ari mengungkapkan, nantinya pengungsi direncanakan menetap di areal hutan lindung yang akan diubah menjadi Areal Penggunaan Lain (APL), semacam enclave untuk pengungsi di dalam kawasan hutan lindung tersebut. Pihak Balai Besar TNGL, kata Ari, telah mengirimkan surat ke Menteri Kehutanan agar melepaskan status hutan lindung yang bakal ditempati pengungsi tersebut.

"Jika masing-masing keluarga mendapatkan sekitar 2 hektar lahan, berarti yang harus dilepaskan sekitar 1.000 hektar lebih," ujar Ari di Medan, Selasa (19/5).
Belum adanya kepastian waktu kapan pengungsi di dalam kawasan TNGL ini direlokasi ke Solok, menurut Ari, membuat perambah non-pengungsi banyak berdatangan. Bahkan, kata dia, beberapa perambah ada yang mengadakan transaksi jual beli lahan di areal yang didiami pengungsi.

"Perambah ini berlindung di balik keberadaan pengungsi yang masih mendiami kawasan TNGL," katanya. Padahal sejak tiga tahun terakhir, Balai Besar TNGL beserta aparat penegak hukum dari Kepolisian Resor Langkat memaksa perambah untuk tak lagi mendiami kawasan TNGL. Perkebunan sawit milik perambah maupun orang-orang di luar pengungsi yang berada di dalam kawasan TNGL dihancurkan.

"Kalau dari Balai Besar TNGL jelas kami menginginkan relokasi ini bisa dilakukan secepatnya, sebab jika ditunda-tunda terus, akan semakin banyak perambah yang mendatangi kawasan dan sulit bagi kita menertibkan mereka kembali," ujar Ari.

Pengecualian diberikan kepada pengungsi asal Aceh yang masih mendiami beberapa kawasan di dalam TNGL, seperti Barak Induk, Sei Minyak, dan Damar Hitam. Ketiga wilayah ini berada di Kabupaten Langkat. Pengungsi diperbolehkan mendiami kawasan TNGL meski undang-undang tentang kawasan konservasi melarang kawasan taman nasional didiami masyarakat, apalagi dimanfaatkan sebagai areal perkebunan. Namun, pengungsi hanya diperbolehkan menempati kawasan TNGL hingga mendapatkan areal baru untuk relokasi mereka.

Menurut Petugas Seksi Pengelolaan TNGL Wilayah VI Besitang Ujang Wisnu Barata, meski secara prinsip Departemen Kehutanan menyetujui pelepasan areal hutan lindung di Kabupaten Solok untuk menjadi lokasi baru pengungsi TNGL, tetapi penetapan batas APL dengan kawasan hutan lindung belum dikukuhkan.

"Kami masih menunggu kabar lebih lanjut dari Departemen Kehutanan untuk pengukuhan tapal batas wilayah untuk pengungsi dengan kawasan hutan lindungnya," kata Ujang.

Senin, 15 Juni 2009

Alfred Russel Wallace and Ternate

TWF to promote Wallace to foreign communities
The Jakarta Post , Jakarta Thu, 06/11/2009 1:13 PM National

The Wallacea Foundation (TWF) is campaigning throughout the Wallacea area to global communities as an effort to realise its plan to set up a biodiversity research center in Ternate, North Maluku.

The maiden campaign is to be held in Beijing during the Indonesian Week on June 17 to 21 followed by an event in Geneva later this year.

"We also aim to build a monument to honor Alfred Russel Wallace," foundation chairman Sangkot Marzuki told reporters Wednesday.

The British naturalist explored the area between 1854 and 1862.
Sangkot said the foundation, set up in 2005 as a merger of the Wallace Development Institute and TWF would promote the area's rich biodiversity, including about 10,000 species of plants, 222 of animals and 647 of birds.

A study by the Conservation International said there were currently about 1,500 endemic species of plants, 49 of threatened birds, 44 of mammals and seven of threatened amphibians in the area due to forest clearing for a government-sponsored transmigration program.
The Ternate city administration announced it would reconstruct the former home of Wallace and designate it as a monument.

In 1858, Wallace inspired Charles Darwin's natural selection theory after he sent Darwin a letter detailing his findings in Ternate.

The letter, attached to his essay On the Tendency of Varieties to Depart Indefinitely from the Original Type, outlined the mechanics of the evolutionary divergence of certain species due to environmental pressures.

While Darwin achieved fame as "the father of evolution", Wallace has remained largely unknown.
Director of public diplomacy at the foreign affairs ministry, Umar Hadi, said his office would support efforts to promote the Wallace area in the international arena.

Orangutan Extinction

Orangutans could face extinction over next 10 years

Apriadi Gunawan , The Jakarta Post , Medan Fri, 06/13/2008 10:03 AM The Archipelago

The number of orangutans could fall by nearly 50 percent over the next decade due to habitat destruction and human-animal conflicts, according to estimates by the directorate general for forest protection and nature conservation.

The current orangutan population is believed to be 61,234, according to data from the directorate general. Most are found in the forests of Borneo (54,567), with the remainder in Sumatra (6,667).

In Borneo, orangutans are found in East Kalimantan (4,825), Central Kalimantan (31,300), West Kalimantan including the neighboring Malaysian state of Sarawak (7,425) and the Malaysian state of Sabah (11,017).

In Sumatra, orangutans are found in Seulawah (43), West Central Aceh (103), East Central Aceh (337), West Leuser (2,508), Sidiangkat (134), East Leyser (1,042), Tripa Swamp (280), Trumon-Singkil (1,500), East Rawa Singkil (160), West Batang Toru (400) and East Sarulla (150).

The orangutan population in Borneo is facing the greatest risk of decline over the next 10 years, said director of biological diversity conservation at the Forestry Ministry, Toni Suhartono.

He said the rapid pace of forest destruction had attributed to habitat loss each year of between 1.5 and 2 percent in Borneo and between 1 and 1.5 percent in Sumatra.

Toni said habitat loss due to forest destruction was the main cause of the reduction in the numbers of orangutans, compounded by less significant factors such as human-animal conflicts.

The government is very concerned about the reduction in the orangutan population, said Toni.

The government has prepared an action plan to preserve habitat in order to keep the orangutan population and habitat in a stable, or even improved, condition.

Toni said the government would focus on a number of efforts in a bid to save orangutans from the threat of extinction.

The programs, due to be completed by 2017, include conservation education, research on sustainable orangutan conservation, improving cooperation with environmental groups, setting up a forum to monitor enforcement of regulations, arranging a logging schedule in orangutan habitat, issuing a law against mining in habitat areas, law enforcement and patrols against poachers.

"The government aims to have all the conservation programs realized by 2017 so as to ensure a sustainable orangutan population and the protection of its habitat," Toni said during a recent workshop organized at the North Sumatra Natural Resources Center in Medan.

About 100 participants from various agencies, higher learning institutes, NGOs and businesses attended the two-day closed-door seminar.

Sumatra Orangutan Conservation Program director, Ian Singleton, who took part in the workshop, expressed doubt the action plans would be achieved by 2017 without effective law enforcement.

According to Singleton, it is essential the Indonesian government include law enforcement in the action plan.

Also necessary, he said, were public awareness campaigns on orangutan conservation and its habitat because many people were still unaware that keeping orangutans as pets was illegal.

"Based on my observations, many orangutans are being kept as pets by certain people, including individuals from the police and military, ironically," Singleton said, adding that of the 120 orangutan confiscations made by authorities, up to 70 percent had involved individuals from the security forces.