Extinction looms as Indonesia opens forests for logging – ‘We’ll see the extinction of all the charismatic species in 10 to 20 years’
By Michael Bachelard, Indonesia correspondent for Fairfax Media
15 January 2013 (Sydney Morning Herald) – Some of the richest and most biodiverse forests in Indonesia will soon be opened up for commercial exploitation under a plan drafted by the new government of Aceh. The chairman of the Aceh parliament’s spatial planning committee, Mr Anwar (who goes by only one name) has confirmed the plan would reduce the total forest cover from about 68 per cent of the province’s land mass to 45 per cent. Most of the newly threatened areas are lowland forests, home to orang-utans, tigers, Sumatran rhinos and other endangered species. Conservationists say the plan drastically increases the danger of their extinction. Much of the forest has been designated ”production forest” since the 1990s, but these areas were saved from logging and agriculture initially because they provided a hiding place for Aceh’s armed Gerakan Aceh Merdeka (GAM) insurgents, and lately by a moratorium imposed by former governor Irwandi Yusuf.
However, local newspaper The Globe Journal has reported the new draft spatial plan prepared under the recently elected governor, Zaini Abdullah, would open these areas for production. The plan must still be approved by Jakarta, and conservationist Mike Griffiths hopes that will provide an opportunity to have it rejected. The head of forest landscape in Aceh’s Department of Forestry, Saminuddin B. Tou, told Fairfax Media that, in his view, ”it is time for logging concessions to be reactivated”. Asked if Mr Zaini was more pro-development than his predecessor, Mr Saminuddin said: ”I think he’s proportional, whereas the previous governor, Irwandi, opened more areas for forests.” An academic adviser to the government, Dr Irfan, has also confirmed that under the new plan ”there are more areas given for the people”. The spatial plan puts two huge forest conservation areas under threat. One, the Leuser ecosystem, is a 2.6 million-hectare tropical forest that houses 54 per cent of Asia’s terrestrial fauna including tigers, orang-utans, rhinos, elephants, and clouded leopard. Since Mr Zaini’s election, the Leuser ecosystem’s independent management authority has been brought under the authority of the province’s traditionally pro-development Department of Forestry. Its staff are uncertain about their future. Mr Griffiths, a former co-ordinator with the Leuser Ecosystem Management Authority, said ”in Indonesia, most of the good forest is gone except Aceh and Papua”. Now, in Aceh, ”they are planning, sooner or later, to knock down a quarter of their forests, most of them in the lowland areas”. ”If this happens, we’ll see the extinction of all the charismatic species in 10 to 20 years. The rhinos will be heading towards extinction in six months, the elephants will last perhaps 15 years, the tigers maybe 20. The orang-utans will go quite quickly because they live in the lowlands,” he said. ”It’s very sad.” [more]
It's pretty obvious that humans will not stop destroying their environment. Which means humans must be eliminated in very large numbers.
"Eliminated" has a rather too totalitarian tone for me. I promote instead an aggressive policy of educating women in underdeveloped regions, which is well known to be one of the most efficient uses of aid funds for long-term development, as well as being a high moral good.
Yeah, it's a made rush all over the world to exploit what is left until it's all gone. Mankind is the most destructive species ever to have existed on planet Earth. The sooner mankind (we) are extinct the better off the planet. We are an intelligent species endowed with selfishness, greed, and a complete lack of wisdom.