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Indonesia Just Made a Huge Move to Protect the Climate

 Indonesia Just Made a Huge Move to Protect the Climate

A new decision from the government of Indonesia could be a major boon for both public health and the global climate. On Monday, President Joko Widodo announced a moratorium on all activities that could damage the nation’s peat-filled wetlands, a move that could help prevent wildfires and billions of tons of carbon dioxide emissions over the next few decades.

The action represents “the kind of leadership that the world needs right now,” Erik Solheim, executive director of the United Nations Environment Program, said in a statement.  

Indonesia is known for its tropical peatlands — bogs filled with carbon-rich, partly decomposed organic matter, or peat. Recently, though, Indonesia’s peatlands have been faced with growing threats from human activity, mainly agriculture. To make room for farmland, people in the region have taken to draining and drying the bogs, sometimes starting fires to aid them in clearing the land.

Indonesian officers put out forest fires in a village in Central Kalimantan province in September 2015. image: Bagus Indahono/European Pressphoto Agency
Indonesian officers put out forest fires in a village in Central Kalimantan province in September 2015. image: Bagus Indahono/European Pressphoto Agency

 

In particularly dry years, these fires have been known to spiral into enormous blazes that pour hundreds of millions of tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere and threaten thousands of people with respiratory illness. In the past, the worst fire seasons have corresponded with severe El Niño events — the most recent occurred in 2015, when wildfires in Indonesia emitted about 1.5 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalents — as much as Japan typically emits in a year. About half of these fires occurred on peatlands.  

“By strengthening the efforts to prevent damages to peatland such as by banning virtually all conversion of peatlands for certain plantations and by encouraging peat restoration, this regulation will be a major contribution to the Paris climate agreement and a relief to millions of Indonesians who suffer the effects of toxic haze from peat fires,” Nirarta Samadhi, director of World Resources Institute Indonesia, said in a statement. He added that the World Resources Institute estimates that by 2030, the new regulation could save anywhere from 5.5 billion to 7.8 billion metric tons of carbon dioxide.

Indonesia has pledged to cut its domestic carbon emissions by at least 29 percent by 2030, and the government has recently indicated that more than half of these cuts should come from the forestry sector. The government began tackling the peatland issue in January, when Widodo established a peatland restoration agency charged with restoring 5 million acres of peatland damaged during the 2015 fires. This week’s announcement helps ensure that the nation’s peatlands will not only be restored, but also protected from future damage.


Source : Washington Post

Indah Gilang Pusparani

Indah is a researcher at Badan Perencanaan Pembangunan Penelitian dan Pengembangan Daerah Kota Cirebon (Regional Development Planning and Research Agency of Cirebon Municipality). She covers More international relations, tourism, and startups in Southeast Asia region and beyond. Indah graduated from MSc Development Administration and Planning from University College London, United Kingdom in 2015. She finished bachelor degree from International Relations from University of Indonesia in 2014, with two exchange programs in Political Science at National University of Singapore and New Media in Journalism at Ball State University, USA. She was awarded Diplomacy Award at Harvard World Model United Nations and named as Indonesian Gifted Researcher by Australian National University. She is Researcher at Regional Planning Board in Cirebon, West Java. She previously worked as Editor in Bening Communication, the Commonwealth Parliament Association UK, and diplomacy consulting firm Best Delegate LLC in USA. Less
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