BRIN supports biodiversity utilization for green, blue economy at G20

The National Research and Innovation Agency (BRIN) has encouraged the use of biodiversity to support a green and blue economy at the G20 events held in Indonesia.

“Biodiversity utilization is an important factor in supporting the green and blue economy in Indonesia,” Acting Officer for Earth Science Research Organization at BRIN Ocky Karna Radjasa noted in a press statement here, Friday.

According to Radjasa, the use of biodiversity to support the green and blue economy is one of the two priority agendas to be discussed at the Research and Innovation Initiative Gathering or RIIG G20.

Radjasa later drew attention to two expected outcomes from the implementation of the priority agenda, specifically emphasizing the use of biodiversity as an important factor in supporting green and blue economies.

The second is the strength and capacity of G20 member countries to utilize biodiversity in a sustainable manner as the main resource to support green and blue economies. They should optimally mobilize biodiversity utilization, so that the benefits can be fairly received by related parties.

Radjasa also affirmed that while using biodiversity to support green and blue economies, the G20 RIIG will prioritize encouraging research and innovation as key factors in sustainable development and for economic growth that is more environmentally friendly.

The agenda also prioritizes efforts to create a sustainable marine economy through economic activities that are balanced with the capacity of marine ecosystems in the long term to remain resilient and healthy.

In addition, the G20 RIIG will promote the inclusive spirit of green and blue economic innovations that will enable all levels of society to benefit from these innovations while still being able to preserve their own environment, he added.

Source: Antara News

Green Taxonomy to empower sustainable financial tools: OJK

Indonesia’s Green Taxonomy will strengthen green and sustainable instrument development, Deputy Commissioner for Financial System Stability of the Financial Services Authority (OJK) said at a G20 Finance Track Side Event here on Friday.

“We, together with the help of eight ministries, have finished Indonesia Green Taxonomy edition 1.0 to support the development of (financial) green tools,” Agus Edy Siregar explained.

According to OJK, the Indonesia Green Taxonomy is a guide for green economic activities that lists the classification of implementations that support environmental protection and climate change mitigation and adaptation, he noted.

It is also meant to serve as a reference for the preparation or arrangement of incentives and disincentives from various ministries and institutions, he said. It can also help financial services sector players understand and categorize green activities while developing a portfolio of products or services, he added.

Furthermore, the Green Taxonomy can help periodic monitoring of credit distribution, financing, and investment in the green sector and prevent false reports of green activities, also known as greenwashing, he informed.

Siregar said the Indonesia Green Taxonomy is still in edition 1.0, meaning its provisions and guidelines can still develop, depending on technological developments and climate change.

“We have designed the green taxonomy into (a scale of five) on which criteria and what necessary certification for a sector or subsector to turn green,” he added.

OJK will collaborate with Bank Indonesia in green reporting, which will encourage financial services institutions to enter numbers on green financing in their monthly reports, he disclosed.

“This is crucial because the world has talked about risk management for climate-related financial risk,” Siregar pointed out. However, he stressed that risk management can only be formulated after ascertaining the magnitude of both green financing and non-green financing.

“If we already know the magnitude then we can design incentives or disincentives. Now, we are still confused on how many (sectors are applying) green financing,” he explained.

Source: Antara News

Indonesia’s G20 Presidency pushing for open, fair economy: ministry

As the G20 President, Indonesia is pushing for an open, fair, and mutually beneficial global economy that allows nations to recover and move forward together from the COVID-19 pandemic, the Foreign Affairs Ministry has said.

“We will foreground multilateralism, partnership, and inclusiveness. Indonesia’s Presidency will ensure open, fair, and mutually beneficial global economy,” the ministry’s Development, Economy, and Environment Director General Hari Prabowo said, according to a statement issued here on Friday.

He made the statement during a closed focus group discussion organized by the National Innovation and Research Agency (BRIN) on Thursday (February 17, 2022).

Themed “Recover Together, Recover Stronger,” Indonesia’s G20 Presidency is focusing on recovering the economy from the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, he said.

It is seeking a recovery that enables all countries to recover and move forward together, he added.

The current pandemic condition is a rare momentum to transform the world and make it better, according to Prabowo.

Indonesia’s Presidency, therefore, will provide some breakthrough platforms for such transformation in various areas, he added.

Indonesia is focusing on three sectors during its Presidency. The first is strengthening global health architecture that will provide global resources to meet challenges amid the current pandemic and health emergencies in the future, he noted.

The second is digital transformation that will ensure inclusive digital transition for economic growth and development, he informed.

Meanwhile, the third prioritized sector is sustainable energy transition that will push the G20 to play a role and ensure clean and cheap technology, he added.

Based on those three prioritized sectors, Indonesia will try to get the G20 to come up with concrete measures despite its norm-setting and norm-shaping nature as a multilateral forum, he highlighted.

“This (Presidency) will be our challenge, and all parties should be involved to achieve the G20’s goals in line with the President’s directives,” he stressed.

Source: Antara News

Let’s go count waterbirds around us

It was 9:30 a.m. as some students stepped on the muddy ground over the embankment, with some screams accompanied by laughter audible after one of their feet landed on cow dung.

“Do not be too loud or else the birds will fly away,” one of the students stated.

The weather was still overcast despite the rain having stopped. Since 6 a.m., Zulfikar Niode, the coordinator, and his friends had been preparing to observe the lake birds though heavy rain had hindered their efforts.

The students, dressed in inconspicuous colors, were divided into three groups, each equipped with a binocular and book to facilitate their identification of bird species.

Each group is guided by an expert, with experience as a birdwatcher and wildlife photographer.

A few minutes later, they trained their binoculars at a bird whose chest was dark blue while it was black from head to its back. They witnessed that its beak and legs were red, and the bird, a Purple swamphen, or Phorpyrio porphyrio, excitingly played among the expanse of water hyacinths.

Purple swamphens are commonly found in Lake Limboto. This type of waterbird is often targeted by hunters visiting the lake on weekends.

“Watching birds turned out to be exciting. The challenge was when we were identifying what kind and observing the characteristics of the bird that has flown,” one of the participants revealed.

This bird-watching activity was the first time for her group, but they have always been involved in actions and campaigns that fight for the good of the environment.

Census of waterbirds

Observation and counting of the number of birds in Lake Limboto is a census activity of water birds initiated by three organizations: Gorontalo Biodiversity (BIOTA), Gorontalo Society of Indonesian Environmental Journalists (SIEJ), and the Alliance of Independent Journalists (AJI) of Gorontalo City.

For SIEJ and AJI, the activity aimed to enrich the journalists’ knowledge in writing about environmental issues, especially the biodiversity of waterbirds and wetland habitats, considering that environmental issues have not been a priority issue of journalists and mass media in Gorontalo.

BIOTA secretary Rosyid Azhar affirmed that the waterbird census in Lake Limboto is part of the 2022 Asian Waterbird Census (AWC) also held in other regions and countries.

Lake Limboto was selected as one of the census locations, as the area is a habitat for over a hundred bird species recorded by BIOTA over the past six years.

According to Azhar, Lake Limboto has experienced quite complex problems in the form of siltation and shrinkage, among others, that still continue to occur.

“For today’s bird census, we recorded that there are 21 species, 10 of which are waterbirds. I expected more birds to be observed, but we started the observations around afternoon, though ideally, in the morning and evening, when the bird starts to eat or return to the nest, “Azhar revealed.

The recorded species of waterbirds are black bittern (Ixobrychus flavicollis), Javan pond heron (Ardeola speciosa), purple heron (Ardea purpurea), cattle egret (Bubulcus ibis), and little egret (Egretta garzetta).

The other species are wandering whistling duck (Dendrocygna arcuata), white-browed crake (Amaurornis cinerea), whiskered tern (Chlidonias hybrida), and purple swamphen (Phorphyrio phorphyrio).

“We also recorded other non-waterbird species, such as black kite (Milvus migrans), savanna nightjar (Caprimulgus affinis), and lesser coucal (Centropus bengalensis). Not all birds near the waters are water birds. What is meant by waterbirds is the one whose life depends on wetlands,” Azhar explained.

All can participate

Waterbirds are more commonly found in natural and human-made wetland habitats, including rivers, lakes, ponds, beaches, mangroves, peat swamps, rice paddies, sewage and garbage dumps, as well as several other locations.

AWC Indonesia acting coordinator Ragil Satriyo Gumilang noted that the AWC is part of the International Waterbird Census (IWC) working through a voluntary network.

According to Gumilang, the AWC conducted in Indonesia aimed to support the most recent data on the species, population, and important habitats of waterbirds.

The goal of this activity was also to increase public capacity and awareness about the important value of water birds and wetlands in Indonesia.

The status of 871 species of water birds was studied scientifically to determine ways to manage them.

In Indonesia, the wildlife population data is useful for formulating the management of several national parks, determining important locations for the Ramsar Convention and the East Asian–Australasian Flyway Partnership, and the status of protected wildlife species.

Since 1986, Wetlands International Indonesia has monitored the implementation of AWC programs across Indonesia.

In 2022, AWC Indonesia’s “citizen science,” a form of public participation in the efforts of advancing updated data, was held along with the Ministry of Environment and Forestry, Wetlands International Indonesia, Indonesian Wildlife Ecology Foundation (EKSAI), BirdLife Indonesia Association, and Burungnesia.

This census is held once a year simultaneously. In 2022, AWC in Indonesia was held during the January-February period.

The types of birds whose data was collected comprised egrets, herons, ducks, chickens, cormorant, oriental darters, pelicans, gulls, crakes, and other waterbirds.

“Anyone can participate, be it a professional birdwatcher, an amateur bird observer, a nature lover, or one who never observed a bird,” Gumilang stated.

2021 census results

Gumilang reported some changes from the AWC Indonesia data, wherein the number of participants had dropped by 29 percent in 2021 on account of the COVID-19 pandemic.

In contrast, the number of observation sites increased by 70 percent, from 124 locations in 2020 to 211 locations in 2021, with the most number of locations being in Java, followed by Sumatra, Kalimantan, Bali / Nusa Tenggara, Maluku, Sulawesi, and Papua.

Gumilang affirmed that the number of participants had increased as a result of the ease of data reporting mechanisms through the Burungnesia app.

In 2021’s census, 77,436 birds were reported and verified, in which 81 percent were waterbirds, 16 percent were non-aquatic birds, and three percent were unidentified.

In terms of the diversity of species, it was reported that there were 272 species of birds, including 105 species of waterbirds, of which 55 percent were classified as protected, and the other 167 were non-waterbirds.

Among those reported birds were five types that are endangered, based on the IUCN Red List: great knot (Calidris tenuirostris), storm’s stork (Ciconia stormi), milky stork (Mycteria cinerea), Far Eastern curlew (Numenius madagascariensis), and Nordmann’s greenshank (Tringa guttifer).

Two reported waterbirds — Chinese egret (Egretta eulophotes) and the lesser adjutant (Leptoptilos javanicus) — fell into the vulnerable category.

Disparity in data still exists among observation sites across Indonesia, as more than 50 percent of the data came from Java, while central and eastern Indonesia has fewer reports.

For instance, some 32 percent of the waterbird species had been recorded in Indonesia but were not reported in the AWC Indonesia activities in the last five to six years.

However, on the positive side, the lack of updated data reminds of the importance of up-to-date data realization to offer certainty in mitigating the decline in wildlife populations.

Source: Antara News