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Slash and burn in the forests of Sumatra
Posted by jamie on 5 November 2008.
It's been a little while since I've updated here about the Esperanza's Forests for Climate tour of Indonesia, but continue it most certainly does. For our exploits crossing from one end of the country to the other and our stop in Jakarta, catch up on the Forests for Climate blog.
But we've arrived in Sungai Pakning, a small port on the coast of Riau in Sumatra, and the Esperanza is anchored in a wide, silty channel running between the mainland and two islands, Pulau Bengkalis and Pulau Padang. The soupy water flowing gently past the ship will be down to the Siak river, the mouth of which is just a few miles south.
Read more »Some good news for Indonesia's rainforests
Posted by saunvedan on 19 August 2008.
The Governor of the province
of Riau on the island
of Sumatra in Indonesia has pledged
to halt deforestation, which could help protect Riau's vast peatlands and
forests that store 14.6 billion tonnes of carbon. Just to give you an estimate
of what that figure means, it's the equivalent of an entire year's greenhouse gas
emissions for the entire planet. Moreover, aside from being an important carbon store,
this area is also important for biodiversity and critical for the people that
depend upon these forests for their survival.
SOS Sumatra: saving the swamp forest from palm oil plantations
Posted by bex on 30 October 2007.
Last week, Jamie wrote about our Forest Defenders Camp in Sumatra, Indonesia: the frontline of where peatland forest is being cleared for palm oil plantations.
Well, this week our volunteers out there are busy trying to stop the destruction of an area of swamp forest. Working with local communities, they're building dams across the canals that are used in logging and draining peatland.
Thick layers of peat underlie most of Indonesia's swamp forest. Over time, the peat layer has locked up millions of tonnes of carbon. Once forests are cleared, peat swamps are drained and decompose to release the stored carbon as carbon dioxide. Forests are often also burned, prior to the planting of palm oil saplings, further compounding the climate problem.
Indonesia gets its own climate change camp
Posted by jamie on 24 October 2007.
Climate change and deforestation are inextricably linked. Forest destruction contributes around one-fifth of all man-made greenhouse gas emissions, more than the entire global transport sector, and the problem is so severe that Indonesia and Brazil are ranked third and fourth respectively in the list of top emitting countries, mainly because of deforestation.
It's against this
background that our latest Forest Defenders Camp opened a couple of weeks ago
on the Indonesian island
of Sumatra, located on
the frontline where the peatland forest is being cleared for palm oil
plantations. Palm oil is used in hundreds of food and cosmetic products, as well as biofuels.

