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NASA imagery confirms fires burning in orangutan hotspot

Fires in Tripa.
Fires in Tripa.


Satellite data from NASA confirms that fires are burning in an orangutan hotspot slated for conversion to oil palm plantations.



According to Web Fire Mapper, a U.N. Food and Agriculture (FAO) site based on NASA MODIS data, there are dozens of fires burning in Tripa, an area of peat forest in Aceh Province, on the island of Sumatra. The fires are burning in an area recently granted as a concession to PT. Kallista Alam, a palm oil company.



Local communities have lodged a legal complaint against PT. Kallista Alam for the project, while a coalition of environmental have filed suit for the alleged breach of a national moratorium on clearing of deep peat areas. Conservationists say the area in question is part of the protected Leuser Ecosystem and is also home to one of the densest populations of Sumatran orangutans.



A decision in the case is expected tomorrow. WALHI, the environmental coalition, is planning a press conference to discuss the ruling at noon in Jakarta.




Fires in Tripa.
Fires in Tripa.






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Palm oil case against ‘Green Governor’ in Indonesia heats up

(03/22/2012) Environmental activists have launched an urgent appeal calling for a ‘just decision’ in a court case that has pitted Aceh’s ‘Green Governor’ and palm oil developers against efforts to save endangered orangutans in a Sumatran peat forest. In letters directed toward judges weighing the case in Sumatra’s Aceh Provice, Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, the country’s REDD+ authority, the World Bank, and the Governors’ Climate and Forests Task Force (GCF), a coalition of conservation groups says the outcome of the case could have substantial implications for efforts to conserve Indonesia’s remaining forests and peatlands.

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