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Scientists call upon Indonesia to recognize value of secondary forests

A group of scientists have called upon the governments of Indonesia and Norway to recognize the conservation value of logged-over and “degraded” forests under their partnership on reducing emissions from deforestation and degradation.



The letter urges the Indonesian government to extend protection to forest areas that may not be pristine but still serve as important carbon sinks, house endangered wildlife, and provide livelihoods for communities.



The scientists note that while the original letter of intent that spelled out the terms of the partnership between Indonesia and Norway mentioned conservation of “natural forests”, subsequent statements from ministers have at times only referred to “primary forests”. Some fear the posturing is an attempt to backslide on the agreement, allowing industrial interests to convert selectively logged forests, which account for the bulk of Indonesia’s remaining forest and often contain 70-80 percent of the biodiversity found in untouched forest, to timber and pulp and paper plantations.



Sumatra. Photo by Rhett Butler.

The letter comes shortly after another group of scientists published a complaint against two front groups working on behalf of Sinar Mas, a conglomerate that controls Asia Pulp & Paper, a paper products brand; and palm oil producers Golden Agri Resources and SMART. That group of scientists accused U.S.-based World Growth International and Australia-based ITS Global—both led by Alan Oxley, an industrial lobbyist—of using deceptive practices in claiming that logging, wood-pulp, and palm oil companies are not important drivers of deforestation.



According to the most recent data on land cover change, Indonesia has now surpassed Brazil as the world’s biggest deforester. Indonesia is now among the top greenhouse gas emitting countries. The vast majority of its carbon emissions result from deforestation and degradation of peatlands.



Dr. H. Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono

President, Republic of Indonesia

Gedung Bina Graha Jl. Veteran 16

Jakarta Pusat



Mr Jens Stoltenberg

Prime Minister of Norway

P.B. 8001 Dep

0030 Oslo




November 18th 2010



Your Excellencies,



As scientists who study tropical forest ecosystems, we would like to commend the Indonesian government for its commitment to tackling deforestation as well as the Norwegian government for the support it is providing to help Indonesia achieve this.



We would like to emphasize how important it is that both governments ensure the agreement currently under discussion not only ensures a reduction in greenhouse gas emissions, but also supports the conservation of Indonesia’s rich and diverse forest ecosystems, which provide livelihoods for millions of people and sustain biodiversity. For decades, some of the world’s most charismatic wildlife, including orangutans, tigers, Asian elephants and rhinos, clouded leopards, and countless other endemic and rare species, have experienced extreme pressure as their forest habitats have disappeared.



A moratorium on the granting of new concession licenses for plantations on natural forest and peatland areas for two years provides a strong starting point to help with such protection, but only if the right safeguards are established from the beginning.



One crucial issue that we feel compelled to raise surrounds the need for protection to include logged forests of high conservation value in addition to unlogged or ‘primary forests’. Certainly, all remaining primary forests must be protected, but any tract of forest should be assessed for its current and potential future conservation value.



This matters because whilst the original ‘Letter of Intent’ between Indonesia and Norway stated that ‘natural forests’ would be protected, recent press reports suggest that only ‘primary forests’ will be protected (see also Reuters).



Government officials have been reported to state that plantation expansion will still be possible because “degraded land and forest” could still be licensed for agricultural use. Indeed, last month the Indonesian forestry minister told the Jakarta Post that “idle forest areas other than primary forests and peatlands” would be available for cultivation. We note with concern that there is still no official Government definition of what constitutes ‘degraded’.



When analyzed together, these statements suggest that the Indonesian government may be adopting a position that would rightly protect primary forest but could then by default define all other ‘non-primary’ forest as ‘degraded’ and as such potentially earmark it for clearance.



This is deeply concerning. In our scientific view, habitats being considered ‘degraded forests’, including disturbed, logged, secondary, and other natural forest types, can be tremendously important for the protection of biodiversity and forest dwelling peoples, as well as for combating global climate change. Recent academic papers have highlighted this exact point, as did an important resolution passed at last week’s Round Table on Sustainable Palm-Oil General Assembly: On orangutans, Ancrenaz et al recently stated: “Our surveys show that orangutan populations can
be maintained in lightly and sustainably logged forests but decline and are eventually driven to localized extinction in forests that are heavily logged or subjected to fast, successive coupes following conventional extraction methods.”



On Sumatran tigers, Maddox et al stated “even the most degraded habitats had significant conservation value; the heavily logged and cleared areas within the oil palm concession contained 90% of the species in the wider landscape including a healthy population of Sumatran tigers.” It must be stressed, though, that monoculture plantations alone sustain very little biodiversity compared with natural forests, even degraded ones.



On Carbon, Berry et al stated “We conclude that allowing the continued regeneration of extensive areas of Borneo’s forest that have already been logged, and are at risk of conversion to other land uses, would provide a significant carbon store that is likely to increase over time. Protecting intact forest is critical for biodiversity conservation and climate change mitigation, but the contribution of logged forest to these twin goals should not be overlooked.”



And more generally, the richest biodiversity in Indonesian rainforests occurs in lowland forests. Conserving this biodiversity requires large, landscape-scale forest areas that in many cases are comprised of selectively-logged or otherwise lightly-degraded forest contiguous with primary forest. Scientific protocols to delineate these critical lowland forests of high conservation value have been endorsed and implemented by diverse stakeholders in Indonesia, and could help advise your forest classification.



With this perspective in mind, we call on the Indonesian and Norwegian governments to recognize and reflect in their forest protection agreements that natural forests, even when not in their primary state, may have high conservation value and are still important for the long-term protection of Indonesia’s biodiversity and its forest dependent peoples, as well as for combating global climate change. Indeed, as world attention turns to Cancun, Mexico for the forthcoming UN climate talks, Indonesia is well placed to set a good example for similar schemes all round the tropical forest belt, on which the future of our global climate stability depends.



Yours sincerely,



Ian Redmond OBE, GRASP Envoy, UN Great Apes Survival Partnership,




Co-signatories:
Prof Tor A. Benjaminsen, Norwegian University of Life Sciences, Norway
Dr Nicholas Berry, Senior Ecosystem Analyst, Ecometrica, Edinburgh, UK
Prof Corey J. A. Bradshaw, Director of Ecological Modelling, The Environment Institute and school
of Earth & Environmental Sciences, University of Adelaide, Adelaide, and South Australian
Research & Development Institute, Australia
Prof Robin L. Chazdon, Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Connecticut, USA
Dr Susan M. Cheyne, Orang-utan Tropical Peatland Project (OuTrop) Director of Gibbon and Felid
Research, Wildlife Conservation Research Unit (WildCRU), Department of Zoology, University
of Oxford; Associate Lecturer, Oxford Brookes University; Scientific Director Busang River
Initiative for Nature Conservation and Communities (BRINCC), Indonesia.

Dr David Edwards, Princeton University, USA, and University of Leeds, UK

Dr Simon Husson, Director, The Orangutan Tropical Peatland Project, Indonesia

Dr Simon Lewis, School of Geography, Earth and Biosphere Institute, University of Leeds. UK

Dr William F. Laurance, Distinguished Research Professor & Australian Laureate, Prince
Bernhard Chair for International Nature Conservation, James Cook University, Australia

Prof Jack Rieley, Special Professor of Geography, University of Nottingham, UK; Co-Director
Kalimantan Tropical Peat Swamp Forest Programme, University of Palangka Raya, Indonesia;
Chairman Scientific Advisory Board, International Peat Society

Dr Douglas Sheil, Director, Institute of Tropical Forest Conservation, Uganda

Dr Ian Singleton, Director of Conservation, PanEco Foundation, Indonesia

Prof Nigel Stork, President-Elect Association for Tropical Biology and Conservation; Head of
Department of Resource Management and Geography, University of Melbourne, Australia

Dr Jatna Supriatna, Conservation International, Indonesia

Prof David S. Wilcove, Ecology, Evolutionary Biology and Public Affairs, Princeton University,
USA

Members of the UNEP/UNESCO GRASP Scientific Commission:

Dr Serge Wich, Chair, GRASP Scientific Commission; Director of Research, Sumatran Orangutan
Conservation Programme (PanEco-YEL) and researcher, University of Zurich, Switzerland

Dr Marc Ancrenaz, Scientific Director, Hutan, Sabah, Malaysia

Dr Suci Utami Atmoko, Faculty of Biology, Universitas Nasional, Jakarta, Indonesia

Dr Christophe Boesch, Director, Max Planck Institute of Evolutionary Anthropology, Germany

Dr Tatyana Humle, School of Anthropology and Conservation, University of Kent, UK

Dr Inza Koné, Biologie de la Conservation des Primates, Laboratoire de Zoologie, Université de
Cocody à Abidjan, Côte d’Ivoire

Dr Mark Leighton, Ecology, Rainforest Conservation and Management, Harvard University, USA

Dr Fiona Maisels, WCS Monitoring Coordinator, Central Africa

Dr Erik Meijaard, People and Nature Consulting International, Indonesia

Dr Willliam Olupot, Director, Nature and Livelihoods, Uganda

Dr Liz Williamson, Coordinator, Section on Great Apes, IUCN SSC Primate Specialist Group











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