Asia Pulp & Paper and associated companies
threaten historic pact
to save Sumatra’s ecosystems and
tigers
EoF Press Release 20 October 2008
Pekanbaru, INDONESIA – Just 10 days
after Indonesia announced a commitment to save Sumatra’s critical
ecosystems at the IUCN World Conservation Congress, an investigation finds that
companies associated with one of the world’s largest paper companies, Asia Pulp
& Paper (APP), have built a 45-kilometer, legally questionable
logging highway through prime tiger habitat in Sumatra.
The
forest destruction by APP and associated companies, under the umbrella of its holding
group, Sinar Mas Group (SMG), is taking place in the Senepis peat forest of
central Sumatra, according to a new investigative report released today by Eyes
on the Forest, a coalition of Jikalahari, Walhi Riau and WWF-Indonesia. The
forest clearing puts at risk local communities as well as one of the critically
endangered Sumatran tiger’s last strongholds, as the shrinking forest brings
tigers into increasing conflict with local communities.
Eyes on the Forest field investigations found that
the logging highway passes through natural forest, a proposed protected area
and a deep peat area with potential massive carbon stores. This is the third
controversial and legally questionable logging road discovered being built by
APP/SMG-associated companies in the last year.
“Unfortunately,
this logging project is just the latest in a continuing pattern of wholesale natural
forest destruction by APP/SMG and its associates in Sumatra,” said Johny
Setiawan Mundung, Executive Director of Walhi Riau. “Our field investigators
found that APP and partners have completed a 45-kilometer highway through the
Senepis peat forest and paved nearly half of it already, even though we could
find no permit for the road.”
The
revelations come less than two weeks after the Indonesian government announced a historic commitment to protect
the natural forests and ecosystems of Sumatra island, putting the company’s
actions increasingly at odds with public and private efforts to protect
Sumatra’s species-rich forests to slow climate change and protect biodiversity.
Senepis and other Sumatran peat forests are a globally
significant carbon store; the carbon-rich peat soil is so deep that simply
cutting the trees or disturbing the soil releases enough carbon emissions to
impact global climate change.
The
APP/SMG-associated companies appear to be preparing infrastructure for when
Riau Province, where the Senepis forest is located, allows natural forest
clearing again. There is a province-wide de facto logging moratorium in place
as Riau Police conduct an illegal logging investigation involving APP/SMG associated
companies and others.
The
two APP/SMG-associated logging concession holders involved in the clearing, PT.
Ruas Utama Jaya and PT. Suntara Gajapati, are among 14 timber and pulp
companies implicated in the ongoing prosecution by provincial police for
allegedly committing environmental and forest crimes. Since the Riau Police
launched their investigation in 2007, Jikalahari and Walhi Riau have filed
reports of such alleged criminal acts by the companies and pushed for the law
enforcement on it.
“The
building of this road has resulted in a massive, 50-meter-wide gash of opened
forest along the 45 kilometers,” said Hariansyah Usman, deputy coordinator of
Jikalahari. “The road splits the Senepis peat forest in two, releasing
significant amounts of climate-altering carbon emissions from the clearing and from
drainage canals on both sides.”
In
addition, the clearing that has already taken place in Senepis by APP/SMG-associates
-- mainly since about 1999 -- has considerably shrunk the size of the forest,
which has led to an increase in human-tiger conflict in the area. Riau is a
stronghold for the Sumatran tiger, of which fewer than 400 survive in the wild.
Legally
questionable forest clearing by APP/SMG-affiliated companies has been
well-documented in central Sumatra. Previous reports by NGOs this
year found that APP/SMG- associated companies are threatening an additional two
important natural forest areas in Sumatra by opening new logging roads and
clearing natural forest along them: the Kampar peatland forest and Bukit
Tigapuluh dry lowland forest block, which is critical for orangutans, tigers,
elephants and the indigenous peoples, the Orang Rimba.
“Major paper customers all
over the globe have cut ties with APP because of its involvement in
unsustainable and likely illegal activities,” said Nazir Foead, director of
corporate engagement at WWF-Indonesia. “We call on APP/SMG and their associates
to stop this unsustainable clearing of our forests and to start behaving as a
responsible corporate citizen. We urge current and future buyers and investors
not to do any business with APP until that time.”
NOTES TO EDITORS:
· *The complete report can be found on
www.EyesontheForest.or.id. Photos and maps to accompany this story are also
available.
*Among the companies that have stopped
buying from APP because of its business practices in Sumatra are Staples Inc.,
the largest office retailer in the United States; Richoh and Fuji Xerox Groups,
both headquartered in Japan; Metro Group in Germany and Woolworths of
Australia. In addition, Forest Stewardship Council formally dissociated itself
from APP in 2007, as did Rainforest Alliance.
*APP China is working to launch an initial public
offering (IPO) on the Chinese stock market soon. Conservationists in China and Indonesia
are concerned that the IPO would provide funds for APP to continue deforestation
in Indonesia
on an even larger scale.
For further information please contact:
Nazir
Foead, WWF Indonesia, ph: 62-811977604, e-mail:
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Johny
Setiawan Mundung, WALHI Riau; ph: 62-8127652754, e-mail:
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Hariansyah
Usman, Jikalahari; ph: 62-812 7669 9967, e-mail:
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Download full reports and press release:
APP Senepis Report October 2008
EoF Report Senepis Oktober 2008
EoF Senepis Pres Release 20 Oct 2008
Siaran Pers EoF Senepis Oktober 2008
APP response to EoF
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