Our
small plane had been flying low over Sumatra for three hours but all we
had seen was an industrial landscape of palm and acacia trees
stretching 30 miles in every direction. A haze of blue smoke from newly
cleared land drifted eastward over giant plantations. Long drainage
canals dug through equatorial swamps dissected the land. The only sign
of life was excavators loading trees on to barges to take to pulp mills.
The
end is in sight for the great forests of Sumatra and Borneo and the
animals and people who depend on them. Thirty years ago the world's
third- and sixth-largest islands were full of tigers, elephants, rhinos,
orangutan and exotic birds and plants but in a frenzy of development
they have been trashed in a single generation by global agribusiness and
pulp and paper industries.
Their plantations supply Britain and
the world with toilet paper, biofuels and vegetable oil to make everyday
foods such as margarine, cream cheese and chocolate, but distraught
scientists and environmental groups this week warn that one of the 21st
century's greatest ecological disasters is rapidly unfolding.
Official figures show more than half of Indonesia's
rainforest, the third-largest swath in the world, has been felled in a
few years and permission has been granted to convert up to 70% of what
remains into palm or acacia plantations. The government last week
renewed a moratorium on the felling of rainforest, but nearly a million
hectares are still being cut each year and the last pristine areas, in
provinces such as Ache and Papua, are now prime targets for giant
logging, palm and mining companies.
The
toll on wildlife across an area nearly the size of Europe is vast, say
scientists who warn that many of Indonesia's species could be extinct in
the wild within 20-30 years. Orangutan numbers are in precipitous
decline, only 250-400 tigers remain and fewer than 100 rhino are left in
the forests, said the International Union for Conservation of Nature.
Millions
of hectares are nominally protected, but the forest is fragmented,
national parks are surrounded by
plantations, illegal loggers work with
impunity and corruption is rife in government. "This is the fastest,
most comprehensive transformation of an entire landscape that has ever
taken place anywhere in the world including the Amazon. If it continues
at this rate all that will be left in 20 years is a few fragmented areas
of natural forest surrounded by huge manmade plantations. There will be
increased floods, fires and droughts but no animals," said Yuyun
Indradi, political forest campaigner with Greenpeace south-east Asia in
Jakarta.
Last night the WWF's chief Asian tiger expert pleaded with the Indonesian government and the world to stop the growth of palm oil
plantations. "Forest conversion is massive. We urgently need stronger
commitment from the government and massive support from the people. We
cannot tolerate any further conversion of natural forests," said Sunarto
Sunarto in Jakarta.
Indonesia's deforestation
has been accompanied by rising violence, say watchdog groups. Last
year, more than 600 major land conflicts were recorded in the palm
plantations. Many turned violent as communities that had lost their
traditional forest fought multinational companies and security forces.
More than 5,000 human rights abuses were recorded, with 22 deaths and
hundreds of injuries.
"The legacy of deforestation has been
conflict, increased poverty, migration to the cities and the erosion of
habitat for animals. As the forests come down, social conflicts are
exploding everywhere," said Abetnego Tarigan, director of Walhi,
Indonesia's largest environment group. Scientists fear that the
end of the forest could come quickly. Conflict-wracked Aceh, which bore
the brunt of the tsunami in 2004, will lose more than half its trees if a
new government plan to change the land use is pushed through. A single
Canadian mining company is seeking to exploit 1.77m hectares for mining,
logging and palm plantations.
Large areas of central Sumatra and
Kalimantan are being felled as coal, copper and gold mining companies
move in. Millions of hectares of forest in west Papua are expected to be
converted to palm plantations.
"Papuans, some of the poorest
citizens in Indonesia, are being utterly exploited in legally
questionable oil palm land deals that provide huge financial
opportunities for international investors at the expense of the people
and forests of West Papua," said Jago Wadley, a forest campaigner with
the Environment Investigation Agency.
Despite a commitment last week from the government to extend a moratorium on deforestation for two years,
Indonesia is still cutting down its forests faster than any other
country. Loopholes in the law mean the moratorium only covers new
licences and primary forests, and excludes key peatland areas and
existing concessions which are tiger and elephant habitats. "No one
seems able to stop the destruction," said Greenpeace International's
forest spokesman, Phil Aikman.
The conflicts often arise when
companies are granted dubious logging or plantation permissions that
overlap with community-managed traditional forests and protected areas
such as national parks. Nine villages have been in conflict with
the giant paper company April, which has permission to convert, with
others, 450,000 hectares of deep peat forests on the Kampar Peninsula in
central Sumatra. Because the area contains as much as 1.5bn tonnes of
carbon, it has global importance in the fight against climate change.
"We
would die for this [forest] if necessary. This is a matter of life and
death. The forest is our life. We depend on it when we want to build our
houses or boats. We protect it. The permits were handed out illegally,
but now we have no option but to work for the companies or hire
ourselves out for pitiful wages," said one village leader from Teluk
Meranti who feared to give his name. They accuse corrupt local
officials of illegally grabbing their land. April, which strongly denies
involvement in corruption, last week announced plans to work with
London-based Flora and Fauna International to restore 20,000 hectares of
degraded forest land.
Fifty miles away, near the town of Rengit,
villagers watched in horror last year when their community forest was
burned down – they suspect by people in the pay of a large palm oil
company. "Life is terrible now. We are ruined. We used to get resin,
wood, timber, fuel from the forest. Now we have no option but to work
for the palm oil company. The company beat us. The fire was deliberate.
This forest was everything for us. We used it as our supermarket,
building store, chemist shop and fuel supplier for generations of
people. Now we must put plastic on our roofs," said one man from the
village of Bayesjaya who also asked not to be named.
Mursyi Ali,
from the village of Kuala Cenaku in the province of Riau, has spent 10
years fighting oil plantation companies which were awarded a giant
concession. "Maybe 35,000 people have been impacted by their
plantations. Everyone is very upset. People have died in protests. I
have not accepted defeat yet. These conflicts are going on everywhere.
Before the companies came we had a lot of natural resources, like honey,
rattan, fish, shrimps and wood," he said.
"We had all we wanted.
That all went when the companies came. Everything that we depended on
went. Deforestation has led to pollution and health problems. We are all
poorer now. I blame the companies and the government, but most of all
the government," he continued. He pleaded with the company: "Please
resolve this problem and give us back the 4,100 hectares of land. We
would die for this if necessary. This is a life or death," he says.
Greenpeace
and other groups accuse the giant pulp and palm companies of trashing
tens of thousands of hectares of rainforest a year but the companies
respond that they are the forest defenders and without them the
ecological devastation would be worse. "There has been a rampant
escalation of the denuding of the landscape but it is mostly by migrant
labour and palm oil growers. Poverty and illegal logging along with
migrant labour have caused the deforestation," said April's spokesman,
David Goodwin. "What April does is not deforestation. In
establishing acacia plantations in already-disturbed forest areas, it is
contributing strongly to reforestation. Last year April planted more
than 100 million trees. Deforestation happens because of highly
organised illegal logging, slash-and-burn practices by migrant labour,
unregulated timber operations. There has been a explosion of palm oil
concessions."
The company would not reveal how much rainforest it and its suppliers fell each year but internal papers seen by the Observer
show that it planned to deforest 60,000 hectares of rainforest in 2012
but postponed this pending the moratorium. It admits that it has a
concession of 20,000 hectares of forest that it has permission to fell
and that it takes up to one-third of its timber from "mixed tropical
hardwood" for its giant pulp and paper mill near Penabaru in Riau.
There
are some signs of hope. The heat is now on other large palm oil and
paper companies after Asia Pulp and Paper (APP), one of the world's
largest such companies, was persuaded this year by international and
local Indonesian groups to end all rainforest deforestation and to rely
solely on its plantations for its wood.
The company, which admits
to having felled hundreds of thousands of acres of Sumatran forest in
the last 20 years, had been embarrassed and financially hurt when other
global firms including Adidas, Kraft, Mattel, Hasbro, Nestlé, Carrefour,
Staples and Unilever dropped products made by APP that had been made
with rainforest timber.
"We thought that if we adopted national
laws to protect the forest that this would be enough. But it clearly was
not. We realised something was not right and that we needed a much
higher standard. So now we will stop the deforestation, whatever the
cost. We are now convinced that the long-term benefits will be greater,"
said Aida Greenbury, APP's sustainability director. "Yes. We got it
wrong. We could not have done worse."