**Pak Rachmat Witoelar: sebelum minta duit untuk pelestarian hutan dari
negara maju, alangkah baiknya kalau kita tertibkan dulu pembakaran hutan
yang liar. Gak perlu duit kan buat itu, yang diperlukan adalah POLITICAL
WILL. *


Indonesia is 3rd largest greenhouse gas producer
mongabay.com
http://news.mongabay.com/2007/0326-indonesia.html
March 26, 2007

*Indonesia trails only the United States and China in greenhouse gas
emissions, reports a study released Friday by the World Bank and the British
government.

Indonesia's rank is primarily due to its high deforestation rate -- about 85
percent (2,563 million tons of carbon dioxide equivalent [MtCO2e]) of its
emissions (3,014 MtCO2e) result from fires and forest clearing. Emissions
from energy, agriculture and waste amount to only 451 MtCO2e.

*The role of peat*

The report echoes findings published last year by Wetlands International and
Delft Hydraulics. That study, titled *Peatland degradation fuels climate
change*, found that emissions from the destruction of Indonesia's extensive
peat bogs alone releases 2 billion tonnes of carbon dioxide a year -- about
ten percent of world greenhouse gas emissions from human activities.

Each year hundreds of thousands of hectares of peatlands are drained and
cleared for oil palm and timber plantations. Generally, developers dig a
canal to drain the land, extract valuable timber, then clear the vegetation
using fire. In dry years these fires can burn for months, contributing to
the "haze" that plagues southeast Asian on a regular basis. Fires in
peatlands are especially persistent, since they can continue to smolder
underground for years even after surface fires on extinguished by monsoon
rains.




Indonesia had the world's world deforestation in 2006.  While burning
releases enormous amounts of carbon dioxide, merely draining peatlands also
contributes to global warming -- upon exposure to air, peat rapidly
oxidizes, decomposes, and releases carbon dioxide. Further carbon -- about
70 percent of emissions -- is released when peatlands are burned.

Beyond contributing to climate change, destruction of peatlands in Indonesia
puts local populations at greater risk of flooding. Peatlands are a natural
means of flood control, acting like a sponge to absorb large amounts of
rainfall and runoff, while reducing the threat of erosion.

*Indonesia: little success in controlling deforestation*

To date Indonesia has had little success in controlling the forest fires or
deforestation that contribute to its disproportionately high greenhouse gas
emissions (Indonesia is world's 22nd largest economy). Corruption and recent
centralization of government has made land-policy management difficult
especially with booming interest in oil palm agriculture.

In January, Indonesia said rich countries should help pay for efforts to
conserve its tropical forests.

"Preserving our forest means we can't exploit it for our economic benefits.
We can't build roads or mines," Rachmat Witoelar, Indonesia's minister of
the environment, told Reuters. "But we make an important contribution to the
world by providing oxygen. Therefore countries like Indonesia and Brazil
should be compensated by developed countries for preserving their
resources."

*More articles on deforestation in
Indonesia*<http://www.mongabay.com/news-index/indonesia1.html>


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