http://www.theage.com.au/world/indonesia-flushes-target-down-carbon-sink-20090305-8q2j.html?page=-1


Indonesia flushes target down carbon sink 
  a.. Tom Allard, Jakarta 
  b.. March 6, 2009 
INDONESIA'S Government has approved a big increase in logging of its tropical 
forests, a decision that could lead to a major jump in carbon emissions and, 
most likely, cause further deadly attacks on villagers by tigers and elephants.

The end of a 14-month moratorium on logging comes amid maulings of Indonesians 
from animals that are struggling to survive in their dwindling habitats.

On Wednesday, a man, 83, on the island of Sumatra was killed after 30 elephants 
stampeded through his village. The death followed a month of elephants running 
amok in the village, which is close to a traditional trail.

"The elephant routes are almost gone," said Johny Mundung, co-ordinator for the 
Indonesian environmental group Wahli in the Sumatran province of Riau, where 
the attack occurred.

While four people have died on the island of Sumatra in the past 3½ months due 
to elephant attacks, the deaths caused by Sumatran tigers have been even more 
dramatic. The death by mauling of an illegal logger in Sumatra on Wednesday was 
the ninth in five weeks.

About half of Sumatra's forests have been cut down, the trees logged and, in 
some cases, replaced with palm oil and pulp plantations.

All the deaths caused by elephants and tigers were in areas where palm and pulp 
oil plantations abound.

Indonesia's deforestation has earned it the title of the world's third-largest 
emitter of greenhouse gases, behind China and the US. More than 80 per cent of 
the emissions are caused by deforestation. Indonesia has destroyed more than 28 
million hectares of forest since 1990, much of it on swampy, densely forested 
peatlands that are the world's most potent carbon sinks, absorbing the 
greenhouse gases spewed out by a rapidly industrialising world.

In 2007, the Indonesian Government said it would stop the clearing of the 
peatlands, shortly before Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono pledged 
to reduce carbon emissions from forests by 50 per cent in 2009 and 95 per cent 
by 2025.

But last month, Indonesia's Ministry of Agriculture quietly announced it would 
begin to issue permits for the destruction of another 2 million hectares of 
peatlands for plantations of palm oil, a product found in many foods and 
cosmetics, and a growing source of biofuels.

A sharp fall in palm oil prices has brought calls from the industry, many 
members of which are substantial political donors, for more land concessions to 
expand production. Officials from the Agriculture Ministry said the new permits 
would be carefully managed and represented only 8 per cent of the remaining 
peatlands.

But Greenpeace said that even the logging of that fraction of the peatlands 
would lead to huge increase in carbon emissions.

The logging of marshy peatlands creates an environmental triple whammy. The 
cutting down of the forests and draining of the peat destroys the carbon sinks. 
Then, the oxidisation of the exposed peat - created from thousands of years of 
organic matter composting - emits more carbon gases.

When the denuded and drained peatlands catch fire during the dry season, they 
typically burn underground and cannot be doused with traditional firefighting 
methods.


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