The future of forest conservation
News from BirdLife International
03-12-2007
The future of forest conservation
Indonesia’s forests have shrunk dramatically in the past few decades. They have been cut with increasing speed for their timber, and to clear land for agriculture and development. Lowland forest areas have disappeared with particular speed because they are most accessible. They are also among the most commercially attractive forests: Indonesia’s lowland forests contain a large percentage of Dipterocarps, hardwood trees whose timber fetches high prices on international markets.
Sumatra has been a target for the oil palm, timber and pulp and paper industries because of its easy access and relatively developed infrastructure. Ninety two percent of Indonesia’s oil palm plantations are located in Sumatra. In 1900, Sumatra had 16 million hectares of lowland forest; today that figure has dwindled to a mere 500,000 hectares. Lowland forests in Sumatra are now regarded as among the most threatened forests in the world.
Sumatra has some conservation forests – designated as such by the Indonesian government for conservation of nature and genetic resources. Most protected areas are in hilly regions because lowland forests have been earmarked for development – lowland forests have little formal protection. Satellite analysis shows that even in protected areas, 10% of the land is without forest cover thanks to encroachment and illegal logging.
This depressing outlook could now change, with the advent of Indonesia’s first ‘restoration forest’ in the centre of Sumatra. Harapan Rainforest represents the first block of commercially valuable lowland forest, under private management licence, that is earmarked for ecosystem restoration in Indonesia. Burung Indonesia (BirdLife in Indonesia) will today (December 7) present this ground breaking work at the UNFCCC in Bali.
http://www.birdlife.org/news/news/2007/12/harapan.html