Title: Oil palm plantation expansion in Indonesia
1Oil palm plantation expansion in Indonesia
- Agrofuels meeting, July 2007
- Down to Earth
2Indonesias remaining forests
Coast line
Forest Cover
Primary Forest Secondary Forest
Forests in Indonesia are being destroyed at a
rate of 6 football fields a second (300ha/s).
3Logging Concessions
Coastline
Forest Cover
Primary Forest Secondary Forest
Forest Concession Permits
Logging Concession (HPH)
4Pulpwood Plantations
Coast Line
Forest Cover
Primary Forest Secondary Forest
Forest Concession Permits
Pulpwood plantation (HTI)
Paper pulp production consumes 23-25 million
cubic metres of timber/year, while production of
pulpwood from plantations is still only 3.8
million cubic metres/year.
5Plantation Concessions
Coastline
Forest Cover
Primary Forest Secondary Forest
Forest Concession Permits
Plantation (HGU)
6Forest Concessions and Over-exploitation
Coastline
Forest Cover
Primary Forest Secondary Forest
Forest Concession Permits
Of the 673 natural disasters that occurred in
Indonesia between 1998 2004, over 65 were due
to environmental mismanagement floods, land
slides and forest fires.
Logging Concession (HPH) Plantation
(HGU) Pulpwood plantation (HTI)
Primary Forest
7Palm Oil Production in SE Asia
- Area of oil palm plantation concessions in
Indonesia is now 6.4 million hectares - second
largest global producer of crude palm oil (CPO)
after Malaysia. - Indonesia Malaysia control some 80 of the
worlds palm oil production. - The Indonesian government wants to overtake
Malaysia and become the worlds biggest palm oil
producer, so it has been promoting plantation
expansion since the 1990s. - Only 3 million ha of oil palm plantations in
Indonesia in 2000 with production of just over 6
million tonnes of CPO. - Indonesia produced 16 million tonnes in 2006
(nearly as much as Malaysia). - Volume expected to increase as plantations
planted within the last 10 years reach full
production and as the area of oil palm
plantations is expanded.
8Palm oil plantations in Indonesia
- Plantations are state-owned and privately-owned
(large companies and smallholders) much is
under nucleus estate outgrowers schemes. - Size of plantations rights for one company is
limited, so parent companies set up new
subsidiaries which collectively control huge
areas. - Example Singapore-based palm oil trader Wilmar
now controls around 500,000 ha of plantations. - Many palm oil plantation companies are owned by
big groups which also have interests in logging
(HPH) and pulpwood (HTI) concessions e.g. Sinar
Mas. - Indonesian government has export-led growth model
which is encouraged by World Bank Group (IMF,
IFC) and some European banks (Rabobank).
9Area under oil palm plantations in Indonesia 1967
2005Source Directorate of Plantations in
BisInfocus, 2006
10Indonesia Malaysia connection
- Over 50 of Indonesian oil palm plantations are
controlled by Malaysian companies - Some 50 Malaysian companies are operating in
Indonesian oil palm sector - Land availability, lower costs, loser controls on
env social impacts - Cant distinguish between Indonesian and
Malaysian palm oil even if labelled - Agreement to co-operate on prices
- MPOA very active in trying to weaken RSPO
standards openly (at RT meetings) and behind the
scenes.
11Demand
- More than 70 of Indonesias palm oil is
exported. - China India are major markets, apart from
Europe and N America - Palm oil has largely replaced other vegetable
oils, such as coconut, for cooking in Indonesia - High demand from food processing (margarine,
biscuits, cakes, confectionary) soaps
detergents, and cosmetics.
12CPO (Crude Palm Oil) exports 2000 2006Source
Central Statistics Agency
13Expansion
- Indonesia is experiencing a second palm oil boom,
largely driven by talk of the demand for
biofuels. - Global price of CPO increased 27 in 2006 to
US564/tonne and is rising month on month - European Union 10 of vehicle fuel from
biodiesel by 2020. SE Asia also developing
biodiesel for its own use. - Indonesia is expecting to more than triple the
area under oil palm cultivation to meet this
demand. - Sawit Watch estimates that a further 20 million
hectares has been zoned for oil palm plantation.
Plans to expand into Papua recently announced. - 40 will be reserved for domestic biofuel needs.
14Biofuels
- Malaysia and Indonesia are gearing to supply 20
percent of the market in Europe and have just
announced that they will set aside 40 percent of
their palm oil output for biodiesel. - Indonesian finance ministry is preparing a
package of incentives to support biofuel
development. - Target is 200,000 barrels/day by 2010
- Malaysian and Chinese investment
- 6.5 million ha of uncultivated land has been
designated for biofuel production (March 2007 -
Is this in addition to the 6 20 million ha or
not?) - Not just oil palm but Jatropha, sugar and cassava
15PRICE OF INDONESIAN CRUDE PALM OIL
16Problems
- Forest destruction
- Forest fires
- Climate change
- Impacts on wildlife
- Destruction of livelihoods
- Land rights
- Indigenous peoples
- Debt
- Poverty
- Smallholders
- Women
- GM varieties
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18Forest destruction
- Indonesians forest destruction rate is the
highest in the world at 2.7 million ha /year
(WALHI) - Estimated 87 of deforestation in Malaysia
between 1985 and 2000 was caused by new oil palm
plantations (FoE EWNI) - Oil palm plantations have probably been directly
responsible for the destruction of 10 million ha
of Indonesian rainforest (FoE EWNI) - Heart of Borneo vs border mega-plantation project
(1.8 million ha) - Developments are still going ahead along the 850
km Kalimantan Sarawak border. (CERD submission
led by AMAN June 2007)
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20Forest Fires
Hotspots in Sumatra 2006
Forest Fire
21Forest Fires
Hotspots in Kalimantan2006
Forest Fire
22Climate Change
- New information about the carbon costs of
production of CPO is emerging. - Indonesia is the worlds 3rd largest contributor
to carbon emissions. - Indonesias 1997-8 forest and peatland fires were
equivalent to 40 of all global emissions from
burning fossil fuels that year (Nature 7/Nov/02).
- Drainage destruction of peat swamps releases up
to 2 billion tonnes of carbon/yr. - Forest fires contribute 1,400 million tonnes of C
per year. - Most Indonesian CPO has net emissions through
- forest clearance
- peat decomposition
- both (where swamp forest is cleared for new oil
palm plantations, as in areas of Riau and Jambi) - Biodiesel from from south-east Asian palm oil may
cause 2-8 times more CO2 emissions than the
mineral oil it replaces. - More research needs to be done on the length of
time and conditions needed for net carbon
sequestration, including cradle-to-grave studies
which cover transport, mill construction etc as
well as the establishment of the plantations.
23Land rights
- Indonesian law basically allows (or even
promotes) land grabbing by companies without FPIC
or due compensation. - Sawitwatch states that large-scale oil palm
plantations had caused over 500 conflicts in the
country by 2006 - If Indonesia is to meet RSPO standards there must
be a change in the laws on land acquisition - Promised Land Palm Oil Land Acquisition in
Indonesia Implications for Local Communities
and Indigenous Peoples (Forest Peoples Programme,
Sawit Watch, HuMA ICRAF, Nov 2006)
24Debt
- Oil palm plantations drive local people
(including indigenous communities) into debt
slavery through co-operative schemes KKPA. - Local people have to pay for the cost of clearing
their land and planting with oil palm, plus the
costs of fertilisers and pesticides for 4-6 years
until the trees are productive. During this
period, they have no income. All these expenses
must be repaid from the price of fresh palm
fruits processed at the factory. - People suffer from land insecurity adverse
prices in their dealings with companies - Ghosts on our own land oil palm smallholders in
Indonesia (Forest Peoples Programme and Sawit
Watch, Nov 2006)
25Smallholders
- Complex issue as many different types
- Some may be producing sustainably (e.g. in Deli
Serdang, North Sumatra) but only small amounts
and no way of identifying this - Under-represented in RSPO
- RSPO Principles and Criteria must not
disadvantage them - Vulnerable to calls for boycott due to debt
- More studies needed
- New smallholders associations established SPKS
in Sanggau, West Kalimantan(2006) Jambi, Riau,
E Kalimantan (2007)
26Women
- Lowest pay/casual labour
- Exposure to pesticides as often work as sprayers
- Men go to Malaysia to work on plantations
- Wives are illegal immigrants or husbands take 2nd
wives - Vulnerable to sexual harassment
- Invisible in surveys
- Not involved in decision-making or consultations
as not considered head of households -
27What are communities saying?
- It all stems from the land if we dont have
land, how can the community prosper? (Talang
Nangka, S Sumatra) - We are not against oil palm plantations or
development. We just want a fair deal (Sanggau,
W Kalimantan) - Indigenous people can no longer grow their own
rice, vegetables and other crops we must buy
food. So the introduction of oil palm plantations
has made local communities poorer. (Cion, W
Kalimantan) - In the old days, if anyone wanted access to our
land they had to ask our permission first. Now
all sorts of people just come and take our
timber cut down the forest. Like the logging and
oil palm companies. (Batin IX, Jambi) - I only realise now how big the demand for palm
oil is from RSPO members. And the meeting ( RSPO
RT4 Singapore Nov 2006) also made me realise how
little they all know about the impacts of oil
palm plantations on communities and the
environment. (Djelani, W Kalimantan)
28What are Indonesian CSOs saying?
- Biofuels is one of the new driving forces of
large-scale, monoculture oil palm plantation
expansion that contributes to global warming,
social conflict and rights abuses in producing
countries, particularly in Indonesia (Sawitwatch
letter to EU 29/Jan/07) - Large-scale plantation expansion could be at a
high cost to the Indonesian people because the
forests that provide livelihoods for hundreds of
thousands of local communities especially
indigenous peoples will be converted to oil
palm plantations. - Indonesias system of large-scale plantations,
including oil palm, violates local peoples
rights particularly those of indigenous peoples
and ignores their rights to a better standard of
living.
29Recomendations
- Each drop of palm oil used in European Union
countries represents the blood, sweat and tears
of ordinary Indonesian people. - For that reason, we call on all buyers of
Indonesia palm oil, investors and plantation
companies to - Stop expansion of large-scale plantations
- Increase productivity on existing plantations
- Settle conflicts with communities
- Apply standards agreed by the RSPO
- Support the shift from large-scale plantations
which currently prevails in Indonesia towards one
that is more favourable to local livelihoods
instead of just providing profits for big
companies - Facilitate the transfer of technology from
companies to communities on quality standards for
palm fruits in order to improve local peoples
incomes.
30Conclusions
- Biofuelwatch is doing great work debunking the
myth of oil palm as a green fuel. - More information is needed on the link between
producer and consumers e.g. biofuel imports,
biofuel processing and biofuel distributors in
UK. - Should not have any confidence in RSPO as
solution to all the problems at best it is a
tool. - Listen to the voices of and support Indonesian
CSOs Sawit Watch, AMAN, SPKS, YKR, WALHI. - Most not lose sight of the livelihoods, human
rights, food security aspects in current concerns
with climate change.
31Thank youTerima Kasih
dtecampaign_at_gn.apc.org