As the province of Riau continues to be enveloped in haze caused by the burning of forests, the Indonesian parliament has finally agreed to ratify the Asean Agreement on Transboundary Haze Pollution
Haze coming from RIau in
Indonesia have started early this year due to an early dry season that
triggered forest fires in the province known for palm oil and paper and
pulp plantations. Image: Reuters / Fikih Auli, via The Irrawaddy
The parliament of Indonesia on
Monday finally agreed to ratify the Association of Southeast Asian
Nations (Asean) Agreement on Transboundary Haze Pollution – almost 12
years since the treaty was first adopted by member states.
The decision comes on the heels of a fresh haze
crisis in Riau, Sumatra, where a thick blanket of smoke has stalled
flights, closed schools, and affected more than 22,000 people with
respiratory problems.
The agreement, which has already been ratified by the
nine other member countries as of 2010, seeks to monitor and mitigate
forest fires that cause widespread air pollution. Indonesia is the sole
Asean country that has not ratified the agreement due to previous
objections on the infringement of sovereignty.
Annas Maamum, the governor of the province of Riau,
which is the centre of the haze resulting from the burning of dry
forests and clearing of lands for palm oil and paper and pulp
plantations, declared a state of emergency last week. He reportedly
appealed to the central government for assistance to combat the fires.
At the parliament, parties representing almost 65 per
cent of lawmakers agreed to ratify the Asean Haze Agreement. Only the
Indonesian Democratic Party of Struggle (PDI-P) and the Prosperous
Justice Party (PKS) declined to support the treaty, again citing the
issues of breaching sovereignty. These two political groups are against
allowing fire fighters from Asean countries to enter Indonesian soil and
extinguish fires.
Protecting the nation’s jurisdicition, however, is a
top priority and battling the haze through the agreement and help of
other countries will be for Indonesia’s benefit, said Indonesian
Environment Minister Balthasar Kambuaya in a report by The
Jakarta Post.
Monitoring the fires
Currently, on the ground and aerial efforts have been
undertaken in Riau to end the forest and peatland fires, according to
the Riau Haze Emergency Relief Taskforce.
A total of 1,449 “high confidence” fire alerts (fires
detected by NASA with a certainty of 30 per cent or higher, based on
brightness and heat produced) were identified in Sumatra from February
20 to March 3, said the World Resources Institute, a Washington DC-based
environmental organisation.
The group, which recently launched Global Forest Watch,
an online site that monitors worldwide forest loss and gain in
near-real time, pointed out how “roughly half of these fires are burning
on land managed by oil palm, timber, and logging companies”. This is
“despite the fact that using fire to clear land is illegal in
Indonesia”, they added.
The forest fires and the resulting haze in Indonesia
are known to be a yearly occurrence that affects not only the country,
but also neighbouring nations like Malaysia and Singapore. The fires are
said to be a result of the dry season that takes place every year from
April to October. The current dry spell, however, is unusually early and
is already one of the driest on records, the WRI noted.
These forest fires also largely attributed to the
billion-dollar palm oil and paper and pulp industries, which have large
tracts of concession areas in Riau, among other provinces in Indonesia.
Slash and burn is a common and cheap method to clear away land for new
farms and plantations.
Building momentum
Last June, the forest clearing caused the worst haze
crisis in the region of Indonesia, Malaysia and Singapore in decades.
Public ire, NGO campaigns, and political action have since gained
momentum, with several companies declaring zero deforestation policies and the Asean closing in on their haze treaty.
Environment Minister Kambuaya, the Environment
Minister of Indonesia, even expressed hope that the country will be able
to ratify the agreement before the upcoming Asean meeting on
transboundary haze in April, reported Today Online.
Meanwhile, Singapore is working on a new legislation
that that would allow it to impose fines on local and international
firms that cause transboundary haze that affect the city-state. These
companies will have to pay fines of up to US$238,000 for such a
violation, based on the current draft bill.
According to the WRI team, “This is a rather small
fine for the large companies that operate in Indonesia, but the
potential impact on their reputations sends a strong signal that
businesses need to do a better job of fire prevention.”
Separately, Singapore-based paper and pulp firm APRIL
(Asia Pacific Resources International Limited) announced on Tuesday its
new measures to help address the forest fire emergency in Sumatra. They
will deploy an additional 200 fire fighters to their original
400-strong group and provide three helicopters and 30 water pumps to the
government’s fire fighting efforts.
This is in addition to the online forest fire
tracking system the firm launched on Monday. Their company blog called
APRIL Dialog will host daily reports of on the ground inspection of
their concessions, which will include: a map of active fires; the
origin, cause and size of each blaze; and, the status of the fire
fighting action.
These efforts follow the Sustainable Forest
Management Policy APRIL began toward the end of January. Greenpeace
International noted that this was “just weeks after being threatened to be kicked out of the World Business Council for Sustainable Development” due to deforestation practices.
The APRIL policy does not contain a “commitment to implement an
immediate moratorium on all natural forest clearance and peatland
development in its suppliers’ concessions”, said Greenpeace.Singapore-listed palm oil firm Golden Agri Resources, on the other hand, announced on Friday its growing commitment to zero deforestation, with the firm extending its Forest Conservation Policy across all its third-party suppliers. These series of corporate social responsibility commitments picked up pace starting from the no deforestation policy started by largest palm oil trader Wilmar International last December.
source :eco-business.com
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