Friday, September 16, 2016

Indonesia's Last Great Rainforest Tipped for Geothermal Development

Indonesia's Last Great Rainforest Tipped for Geothermal Development

The Leuser Ecosystem in Indonesia's westernmost Aceh province is one of the
few places on Earth where tigers, orangutans, elephants and rhinos coexist
in the wild.

Soon, however, these creatures may have to make way for a new addition to
their habitat - geothermal energy - a prospect that has conservationists
wringing their hands.

"Why do they want to build it inside Aceh's best remaining forest?" asked
Rudi Putra, adviser with the Leuser Conservation Forum.

In late August, Aceh Governor Zaini Abdullah penned a letter to the central
government asking to re-zone 8,000-hectares of the ecosystem for geothermal
- heat the comes from the earth - exploration.

The plan, undertaken in partnership with PT Hitay Panas Holdings - a Turkish
company run by one of Turkey's richest men - targets a core zone of the
800,000-hectare Leuser National Park - a UNESCO World Heritage site at the
heart of the 2.8 million-hectare ecosystem.

The government is already embroiled in a class-action lawsuit against a
pending 2013 provincial spatial plan that seeks to leave Leuser open for
development - a clear violation of national-level protections.

The re-zoning request was framed as an assist to President Joko Widodo, who
has pledged to add 35,000 MW of electricity to Indonesia's skimpy energy
grid by 2020, and increase the percentage of renewables in the mix.

Environmentalists, however, worry such development will start a chain
reaction leading to Leuser's collapse - one authorities will be powerless to
stop.

"Anywhere you put roads, destruction follows," Farwiza Farhan, chairperson
of the Forest, Nature and Environment of Aceh NGO (HaKA) said, adding that
timber interests and small-time farmers used them to exploit forests
previously inaccessible, leading to habitat loss.

"Right now it is geothermal, but what's next? Even now they [the
authorities] can't protect Leuser," she said.

Despite federal conservation laws, recent decades have seen a proliferation
of illegal encroachment and logging whittle Leuser down by about 5,500
hectares a year.

In Sumatra as a whole, logging and conversion for agriculture has toppled
nearly a quarter of the forests since 2000.

Crown jewel

The Aceh government's geothermal plans focus on 8,000 hectares in the Kappi
Plateau, a 150,000-hectare expanse considered Leuser's most indispensable
landscape.

"Kappi contains some of the best forests remaining in the world," said Rudi
Putra, founder of the Leuser Conservation Forum.

The area's many salt lakes and fruit-bearing trees, he added, made it an
ideal habitat for creatures large and small. Some 200 Sumatran elephants
occupy the plateau - about 10 percent of the world's remaining population -
that would be imperiled should the geothermal plans go through.

"If the geothermal is contracted in the area, we will lose many, many
animals," he said. "We will lose not only 8,000 hectares, but I think we'll
end up losing the whole plateau."

By allowing farmers and loggers to strip the forest with relative impunity,
it was the road-building, he stressed, that would deliver the death blow.

Wrong way forward?

Indonesia sits astride 40 percent of the world's geothermal potential, with
half found on the island of Sumatra alone.

According to Rudi, it is unclear why, on an island with such abundant
geothermal potential, a protected zone as precious as Kappi would be
targeted.

"Maybe the government allocated the area to one company, and another area to
another company, so that's why the target for this company [Hitay] is the
Kappi Plateau," Rudi said.

"The government could say, 'No, you cannot explore this area because it's in
the core of the national park,'" he said. "I don't know why the government
hasn't talked like this."

Attempts to reach Hitay for clarification on the matter were unsuccessful.

According to Farhan, Environment and Forestry Minister Siti Nurabaya, who
will have final say over the rezoning request, has a good track record in
her nearly three years in office.

"So far, the [environment and forestry] minister [Siti Nurabaya] has been
making good moves in trying to clean up the permit system and reduce
deforestation and forest fires, in tackling the big problems," she said.
"But I can't really tell where she stands on this issue."

The ministry has not yet indicated when it might respond.

According to Rudi, micro-hydro energy offers a better solution to the
province's energy needs. Unlike geothermal - which would require locals to
pay for use - micro-hydro plants would be free, "and the environmental
impact would be less," he said.

"We are not against geothermal," Rudi said, "but there are so many other
options, and the priority should be in areas outside the Kappi plateau."

"There is no plateau like it left in Sumatra, so if we lose Kappi, it means
we have lost the last of Sumatra's richest forests," he added.

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Ref:
http://www.voanews.com/a/indonesia-last-great-rainforest-tipped-for-geotherm
al-development/3500017.html


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John Diecker
APT Consulting Group Co., Ltd.

www.aptthailand.com

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