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REDD Preparation in Indonesia Wahjudi Wardojo. Forestry Research and Development Agency (FORDA) Ministry of Forestry, INDONESIA. FOREST IN INDONESIA. 57. 53 M ha (47 %). Source : Forest Planning Agency, MoF (2006 ). home of mega biological diversity,. one of the custodians
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REDD Preparation in IndonesiaWahjudiWardojo Forestry Research and Development Agency (FORDA) Ministry of Forestry, INDONESIA
FOREST IN INDONESIA 57. 53 M ha (47 %) Source : Forest Planning Agency, MoF (2006)
home of mega biological diversity, one of the custodians of global peat land
source of income and other customary uses for forest communities employed around 5.4% of the country’s labor force, in early 1990s
BASIC POLICIES OF FOREST MANAGEMENT • Based on Forestry Law (1999) and Conservation of Biodiversity Law (1990) • Accommodating Philosophy of Eco Centrism and Anthropo Centrism • Balancing between Sustainable Forest Management and Development Purposes
Economic crisis & Decentralization euphoria Expansion plantation for pulp /paper industry and estate crops (oil palm, rubber, cocoa) Moratorium on forest conversion, reduced AAC, law enforcement, improved forest management
UNDERLYING CAUSES OF DEFORESTATION AND FOREST DEGRADATION Poor Governance at all Pillars: Government, Business, and Community Sectors Government e.g.: Ineffective law enforcement and control, insufficient participation and transparency, and ineffective forest management Business e.g. : rent seeking behavior Community e.g.: lack of institution capb Low global and regional commitments
FORESTRY SECTOR POLICY: FIVE PRIORITY POLICIES AND PROGRAMS (2004-2009) • Combating illegal logging • Forest & land rehabilitation and forest conservation • Forestry sector restructuring through enhancement of timber plantation and wood-based industries • Community empowerment Community forest) • Securing forest land (strengthening the legal status of state forest land)
REDD • Some 18% of GHG are caused by deforestation • Climate regime does not yet provide developing countries with necessary funding to address it • Participation in reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD) is voluntary • Indonesia is interested to participate in REDD
Forest and Global Challenges • We are facing two big challenges: climate change and food, energy, water scarcity (FEWS) • In the context of climate change, forest can be as sink and source • Forests need to adapt impact on climate change • In the context of FEWS, forests could play important roles in solving this scarcity • However, forests could also be threatened by this problems as demand for land will be significantly increase
Indonesia Forest Climate Alliance (IFCA) • MoF experts, other government officials, CSOs, academician, national and International researchers; • Financial and technical support from Australian Government, GTZ; UK-DfID, WB • Kick-off meeting July 2007 followed by studies, national workshops, public consultation
Indonesia REDD (REDDI) Road Map 2007 Post 2012 2012 2008 2009 2010 2011 Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Preparation Phase * Analysis (Architecture and Strategies) * Communication/ Coordination/Consultations COP 13 • Design Fine Tuning • System Establishment • - Pilot Design Carbon-Finance (Pilots) • - Pilot /demonstration activities • Testing • Knowledge Management Full Implementation of REDD Workshop, SBSTA, UNFCCC, G8, Etc. COP14 COP15 COP13
KEY ELEMENTS of REDDI Emissions reference (baseline) Strategies to reduce emissions and to ensure their permanence Monitoring and verifying emissions reduction, and preventing leakage REDD market/ financing Payment distribution (mechanism and management)
FIVE KEY SECTORS WERE EXAMINED • Natural Production Forest • Protected Area Management • Industrial Forest Plantation • Forests and Peat lands, and • Forest Conversion to Oil Palm
Basic Criteria for the Selection of Pilot/Demonstration Activities • Availability of Information • Biophysical Variation e.g. deep peat, and high carbon stocks • Level of Threat, e.g. fire, encroachment, unplanned deforestation. • Social Equity pro-poor dimension • Economic Variability • Tenure : clarity over rights in land and forest • Governance
Monitoring & Verifying Emissions Parameters to be monitored: • Change in forest cover: using remote sensing technique • Change in carbon stock: field measurement and modeling • Base line: National, sub-national, or project-based ? • National base line: generate larger financial flows and reduce overall risk, but involve higher transaction costs and greater inefficiencies
Financing and Market • Fund-based Financing, through bilateral and multilateral cooperation • Voluntary-based Financing, from CSO, and Private Sectors • Market form of REDD is still uncertain • It is expected to be large market for large forest in Indonesia
Payment Distribution The existing institutions should be strengthened to: • receive and distribute fund • track emission reduction credits • adjust existing laws • enforce law and resolve disputes • ensure achievement in emission reduction • handle contract and logistic • to organize internal distribution mechanism A need to address rights, responsibilities and authority between local, national, and independent entities for sale and payment distribution
CONCLUDING REMARKS • Indonesia forests play significant roles for social, economic, as well as environmental purposes for the national and global benefits. • Forest land use planning allocates forest areas into conservation, production as well as convertible forests for development purposes in a balanced way. • REDD mechanism offers options to reduce emissions from deforestation , and opportunity to receive benefits on the basis of carbon credits saved • Indonesia is ready to implement REDD demonstration activities and share the result for further negotiation.