Central Sulawesi’s forests damaged by illegal logging, mining: ranger

Illegal logging, mining, and encroachment have caused damage to Central Sulawesi’s forests, according to Acting Head of the Lore Lindu National Park (BTNLL) Hasmuni Hasman.

“The damages have occurred both within the Lore Lindu National Park area and outside the national park,” he remarked here on Monday.

A total of 264,874 hectares of Central Sulawesi’s forest area were in a critical condition due to deforestation, he noted while quoting data available in the Environmental Affairs and Forestry Ministry’s Decree No 306 of 2018 on National Critical Land Mapping.

The 2019-2020 data on deforestation in Central Sulawesi showed that the deforested area had decreased to 44,523.9 hectares.

To help reduce the deforestation coverage further, Hasman called for contribution and participation of various stakeholders to stop illegal logging and mining activities as well as human encroachment.

The UNESCO in 1977 designated the Lore Lindu National Park as a world Biosphere Reserve to help mitigate the impacts of climate change, he remarked while adding that the preservation of the national park was therefore crucial.

Hasman noted that his office had helped local people living around the national park to develop micro-, small-. and medium-scale enterprises (MSMEs), so that they do not merely rely on the forest products to earn a living.

The Lore Lindu National Park is one of Sulawesi’s important natural reservation sites that is home to a wide variety of flora and fauna in this island.

The park, with its beautiful scenery, holds a great number of endemic flora and fauna and sits at the Wallacea line, which is a shifting zone between Asia and Australia.

The park is home to at least five species of squirrels and 31 of its 38 rat species are endemic. There are at least 55 species of bats and 267 birds, including maleo birds and red-knobbed hornbills. The largest red-knobbed hornbill, locally known as “allo,” inhabits this park.

Thousands of weird and wonderful insect species can be seen around the park and several of them are attractive species, such as butterflies, which can be seen, as they fly along the water course or drink from puddles and mudbanks.

Source: Antara News

RI lobbies IPU delegates for Israel-Palestine conflict resolution

The Indonesian delegation is lobbying representatives at the 144th Assembly of the Inter-Parliamentary Union (IPU) for their support for complete independence for Palestine and a two-state solution for the Israel-Palestine conflict.

Indonesia has consistently raised the Palestinian issue at every annual session of the IPU.

“Some of the Indonesian delegates are lobbying other delegates in the general debate session to prepare the draft resolution regarding the issue,” Deputy Head of Inter-Parliamentary Cooperation Board (BKSAP) of the Indonesian House of Representatives (DPR RI), Mardani Ali Sera, said.

He made the statement after attending a debate on international peace and security at Bali International Convention Center (BICC), Nusa Dua, Bali province, on Monday.

Currently, Indonesia is trying to include the issue on the list of emergency items to be discussed at the assembly session so that the resolution to the issue can be agreed upon by the delegates.

“We are attempting to build a consensus, thus our option can also be accommodated and accepted (by other delegates),” deputy head of the BKSAP of DPR RI said in response to a question asked by ANTARA.

He further said he is optimistic that the draft resolution concerning the Palestinian issue can be supported by the majority of delegates at the 144th IPU assembly session, considering that the Speaker of DPR RI, Puan Maharani, is acting as the chair of the session.

“We expect that at the assembly session, the Palestinian issue will become a firm decision from all members of the IPU,” he remarked.

Regarding the possibility of negotiating the issue with Israel, he said that Indonesia will only negotiate through the forums of the United Nations (UN) and the IPU since Indonesia does not have diplomatic relations with Israel and does not recognize it as a state.

“We support a two-state solution which must be realized immediately,” Sera added.

Earlier, Maharani had also highlighted the Palestinian issue in her remarks at the opening ceremony of the 144th IPU Assembly on March 20, 2022.

“This assembly can also strive to achieve the full independence of Palestine,” she said.

It is expected that the forum would also provide a solution to the Russia-Ukraine conflict and the domestic political tensions in Myanmar, she added.

Source: Antara News

2024 elections: KPU to open political party registrations in Aug

Chairperson of the General Elections Commission (KPU RI) Ilham Saputra confirmed that the commission will open registrations for political parties seeking to participate in the 2024 general elections from August 1–7, 2022.

“(The registration of political parties for the 2024 general elections) will be on August 1 until 7, 2022, according to our electoral schedule,” Saputra told journalists after delivering the opening remarks during a public hearing on the draft of the KPU RI regulation on political parties registration at the KPU RI Building here on Monday.

The electoral commission will also notify Commission II of the House of Representatives (DPR RI) to deliberate on the KPU RI draft regulation in stages, the schedule, and program of the 2024 general elections, he informed.

Saputra highlighted that electoral regulations are essential as a legal basis for devising other electoral regulations, such as on the election budget and the election preparation procedure.

The commission chairperson expressed the hope that the regulation would be discussed in the legislature soon to ensure its prompt finalization.

Prompt finalization of the electoral regulation will allow new KPU RI commissioners to prepare for the election swiftly after taking their office at the electoral commission later this year, he added.

Saputra also responded to journalists’ questions about recent calls by several politicians and public groups to postpone the 2024 general elections.

The chairperson affirmed that as the Constitution and the existing laws require elections to take place once every five years, the electoral commission will refer to prevailing laws in preparing for the general election.

The KPU RI and the legislature have also decided that the 2024 general election will take place on February 14, 2022, he added.

“KPU RI will proceed (to prepare for) the 2024 general elections (according to the agreed timetable),” Saputra remarked.

Source: Antara News

G20 must push child-friendly city concept: ministry

The G20 Presidency needs to consider the development of a responsive and child-friendly city system, the National Development Planning Ministry has said.

The statement was delivered by Director of Family, Women, Children, Youth, and Sports at the ministry Woro Srihastuti Sulistyaningrum at a webinar, accessed from here on Monday.

To improve the quality and competitiveness of human resources, the state must ensure that children grow optimally, are protected, and have their rights fulfilled, she stressed.

The state needs to build or reinforce a responsive, friendly, and flexible system, which could be implemented on a national scale, down to the village level, to create a child-friendly Indonesia.

Among the efforts that can be done is the imposition of regulations, information dissemination, and the improvement of institutions or agencies, she said. It is also important to pay attention to coordination between sectors as well as funding, she added.

The system that will be built would also need to consider things such as ways to improve access and quality of services in all children-related aspects, so that children can participate in development in accordance with their stage of growth, she said.

She cited the child-friendly district/city program initiated by the Women’s Empowerment and Child Protection Ministry as one of the government’s efforts to achieve this ideal.

Currently, 275 out of 514 districts or cities have been deemed child-friendly spaces. It is expected that the program would encourage regional governments to conduct various programs aimed at the fulfillment of every child’s rights.

Sulistyaningrum also said that the government must understand that all children — whether city or village children — have a different set of problems that must be resolved through stronger collaboration, from the large scale down to the smallest scale.

Later on, the prospective system could recognize every child’s problems from various aspects, and children could be protected through better sub-systems in government or policies that would be made in the future, she elaborated.

“To be able to create a child-friendly environment, collaboration between the government and non-government is certainly an important thing in ensuring the success of child protection development,” she said.

Source: Antara News

Uno attributes MotoGP success to government-private collaboration

Collaboration between the Tourism and Creative Economy Ministry and the private sector contributed to the successful convening of the MotoGP Pertamina Grand Prix of Indonesia 2022 in Mandalika, West Nusa Tenggara (NTB), Sandiaga Uno stated.

“I do really hope that this ongoing collaboration would continue and be further improved, expanded and sustainable. It is because our awakening is a common awakening. Hopefully, this would be our contribution to recovery of the economy after the pandemic,” Minister of Tourism and Creative Economy Sandiaga Salahuddin Uno noted in a statement on Monday.

During the MotoGP race held at the Pertamina Mandalika International Street Circuit in Lombok Island on March 18-20, the ministry and the private sector provided goods and facilities required to support the implementation of health protocols to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

The other steps taken encompassed building clean toilets and giving away health kits containing hand sanitizers, vitamins, face masks, and anti-mosquito cream to various parties including participants and audience as part of a public awareness campaign called “Cleanliness, Health, Safety , and Environment Sustainability” being promoted by the government.

Chief Sales & Marketing Officer of Enesis Group, Ryan Tirta Yudhistira, who collaborated with the Ministry of Tourism and Creative Economy, expressed his gratitude and also thanked him for being given the opportunity to be part of this international event.

“Thank you for the opportunity. Hopefully, this collaboration will continue in the context of Indonesia’s economic recovery,” Ryan added.

Source: Antara News

Sustainable forests for combating climate change

Indonesia is ready to embark on a new chapter of life, as the Nusantara Capital City begins its development with the rehabilitation of forests in the area, as said by President Joko Widodo.

During a visit to the Mentawir Nursery, North Penajam Paser District, East Kalimantan, on March 14, 2022, the president said that the rehabilitation was meant to revitalize the forest area around the city to its original function as a tropical forest and not a homogeneous monoculture expanse of vegetation.

Efforts to rehabilitate forests in the new capital will be supported by construction of the Mentawir Nursery that will produce 15-20 million seedlings to be planted in critical lands.

The measure was taken to materialize the concept of a forest city for the new capital, wherein of the 256 thousand hectares of the IKN authority area, around 70 percent is in the form of natural cover and trees.

Not only the new capital city, but other forests in Indonesia were also rehabilitated by the government, through the Environment and Forestry Ministry, in a bid to suppress the rate of deforestation in the country.

Rehabilitation efforts have been one of Indonesia’s focuses in recent years. The focus also extended to peat and mangrove areas.

Establishment of the Peatland Restoration Agency, which is now the Peat and Mangrove Restoration Agency, indicated the government’s commitment to restoring and rehabilitating degraded peat and mangrove areas.

The forestry and other land use (FOLU) sector is also in the spotlight when Indonesia targets a net carbon sink in the sector by 2030. It was expected that net zero emissions could be achieved in 2060 or earlier.

In the updated Nationally Determined Contribution (NDC) climate target document, Indonesia targets a 29-percent reduction in greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 alone. If the global community extended its support, it is expected to reach the 41-percent target of reduction.

Of these targets, FOLU has the largest reduction target of 17.2 percent through individual efforts and 24.1 percent with support from the global community.

The rest came from the energy sector (11 percent and 15.5 percent), waste (0.38 percent and 1.4 percent), agriculture (0.32 percent and 0.13 percent), and industry and product use or IPPU (0. 10 percent and 0.11 percent).

Indonesia’s commitment in the FOLU sector resulted in several achievements, one of which was the reduction of deforestation by 75 percent to 115,460 hectares during the 2019-2020 period.

This figure shows a decrease as compared to the deforestation of 462,460 hectares during the 2018-2019 period.

According to the ministry’s data, the gross deforestation rate during the 2019-2020 period reaches around 119,091 hectares, with reforestation covering an area of 3,631 hectares. Meanwhile, gross deforestation during the 2018-2018 period was recorded at 465,500 hectares and the reforestation area reached three thousand hectares.

The area burned due to forest fires has decreased in recent years. Based on SiPongi data from the Environment and Forestry Ministry, the area burned in 2021 reached 358,867 hectares, or up from 296,942 hectares in 2020.

However, this number shows a drastic decrease from the area burned in 2015 and 2019, which reached 2.6 million hectares and 1.6 million hectares, respectively.

In 2021, vegetative forest and land rehabilitation efforts were also conducted in an area of 203,386 hectares.

It comprises forest rehabilitation in an area of 46,752 hectares and mangrove rehabilitation in an area of 35,881 hectares.

As efforts to rehabilitate the land were made in an area of 67,138.73 hectares, so were the efforts to rehabilitate watersheds spanning an area of 11,709 hectares.

Sustainable forest

Environment and Forestry Minister Siti Nurbaya Bakar stated that Indonesia will continue to move to fulfill its commitments to control climate change without waiting for promises from developed countries. She delivered the statement on the occasion of the 2022 Forester Service Day.

To cement Indonesia’s commitment to achieving the FOLU Net Sink target by 2030, the ministry issued the Decree of the Environment and Forestry Ministry Number 168 of 2022 that contains the 2030 FOLU Net Sink Operational Plan.

The minister stated that after 2030, the FOLU sector was expected to be able to absorb greenhouse gases along with reducing emissions from energy transition activities as well as other sector exploration activities to achieve carbon neutral or net zero emissions by 2060.

Minister Bakar said that the program would apply the principles of sustainable development that include sustainable forest management as well as environmental governance and carbon management.

The main target remains on the efforts to reduce deforestation and forest degradation, she highlighted.

Although it is not easy, Indonesia will continue to employ the principles of sustainability as the basis for environmental development.

This sustainable foundation is also the theme of World Forest Day 2022, which is commemorated every March 21. This year’s theme is “Forests and Sustainable Production and Consumption.”

As quoted from the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) website of the United Nations, sustainable forest management is one of the keys to dealing with climate change.

Forests also play an important role in addressing poverty issues and meeting the targets of the Sustainable Development Goals.

Professor Herry Purnomo of the Faculty of Forestry at Bogor Agricultural University opined that public contribution was necessary to encourage sustainable forest management.

One effort that the public can make to contribute to the cause is to use certified forestry products.

The professor deemed it important since by buying certified products, the entrepreneur or forest manager would strive to meet such demands, thereby following the regulations of sustainable forest management.

Some of the certificates for sustainable forest production are the Timber Legality Verification System, or SVLK, issued by the government. SVLK aims to ensure that wood products and their raw materials are obtained from legal sources.

There are also several other certifications, such as global-scope ecolabels issued by the Forest Stewardship Council.

Some products with certifications that can be used by the community were furniture and paper, he pointed out.

To encourage the public to use forest products from sustainable sources, it is necessary to promote the behavior on a national or regional scale. People could start by using certified forestry products in government buildings.

He also called for consistency in the environmental recovery efforts that had been successfully brought up by Indonesia, using the momentum, such as the Indonesian G20 Presidency.

He expected that annually, efforts would be made consistently to decrease deforestation and increase reforestation.

Indonesia currently leads in terms of reducing deforestation, and the global community is mostly focused on various efforts being undertaken in the country.

By consistently pushing for a sustainable system and encouraging environmental recovery, Indonesia can lead by setting an example, backed up by the leadership of the G20 2022, he concluded.

Source: Antara News

Pertamina prioritizes comprehensive energy transition to cut emissions

State-run oil and gas corporation PT Pertamina (Persero) has set a more comprehensive energy transition as the enterprise’s priority program by increasing the energy mix to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

“PT Pertamina is committed to becoming an environmentally friendly and socially responsible company, which upholds good corporate governance,” President Director of the company Nicke Widyawati noted in a statement on Monday.

According to the statement, currently, the company has played an important role in leading the green transition of Indonesia’s energy industry and targets a 30-percent reduction in emissions by 2030.

Furthermore, it will prioritize the development of new and renewable energy to overcome environmental problems to support the realization of Indonesia’s energy mix in 2030.

In addition, PT Pertamina supports Indonesia’s 2022 G20 Presidency that has chosen energy transition as one of the agendas of the inter-governmental forum.

As a member of G20’s Business 20 (B20) Task Force on Energy, Sustainability, and Climate, the enterprise strives to become a strong catalyst for green recovery in accordance with the principles of energy security, energy equity, and environmental sustainability.

For instance, the corporation formed a Sustainability Committee led directly by Widyawati in 2021. The committee gives high importance to addressing various global energy issues, including the energy transition program.

In addition, the president director remarked that PT Pertamina implemented eight strategic initiatives to develop environmentally friendly and sustainable energy.

Some of the initiatives are establishing green refineries, developing bioenergy, commercializing hydrogen, increasing gasification, initiating battery and integrated energy storage ecosystems, as well as increasing the capacity of installed geothermal power plant.

“We believe that Indonesia’s abundant geothermal resources can become a strong backbone to expedite the energy transition program in line with the government’s goal of achieving net zero emissions in 2060,” Widyawati added.

Source: Antara News

TNI Commander welcomes maritime cooperation with India

Commander of the Indonesian Military (TNI) General Andika Perkasa lauded the planned cooperation on maritime affairs between Indonesia and India as a strategic move that will benefit both countries.

“Cooperation on maritime affairs with India is a strategic measure in the exchange of information on Indonesia and India’s maritime territory,” Perkasa, as observed from a video broadcasted on YouTube, stated here on Monday.

The TNI chief earlier received the Indian Defence Attache for Indonesia, Captain Amitabh Saxena.

He noted that according to Indonesia’s regulation and authority, the military will first coordinate with the Maritime Security Agency (Bakamla), the Ministry of Transportation, and relevant institutions to follow up on the cooperation plan.

Perkasa also promised to assist Saxena in coordinating with relevant ministries and agencies to follow up on the plan.

He also lauded another form of cooperation with India in the education sector, with the scholarship programme sponsored by the Indian government to be the form of cooperation.

Meanwhile, Saxena noted that the White Shipping Information Exchange will be one of the several planned cooperation schemes between Indonesia and India.

The White Shipping Information Exchange agreement will cover the exchange of information on Indian ships in Indonesia and vice versa, he remarked.

Earlier, Coordinating Minister of Political, Legal, and Security Affairs Mahfud MD had highlighted the importance of a strategic and comprehensive partnership between Indonesia and India.

The coordinating minister had met India’s National Security Advisor Ajit Doval during the second India-Indonesia Security Dialogue (IISD) in Jakarta on Thursday (Mar 17).

“Our countries are convinced that the IISD will enhance our cooperation to address common challenges and bolster our opportunities in enhancing cooperation in the political and security aspects,” Mahfud remarked.

Source: Antara News