'When I read conservation commentaries it often strikes me how much such
commentaries resemble those made by the cavemen of yore — no offense to the
cavemen.'
The amount of lies, untruths and half-truths in conservation is truly
spectacular. Hardly a day goes by in which I don’t read or hear some very
questionable statement about a species, their habitats, or the reasons why
these are disappearing.
And the people who are
making these questionable statements are as likely to be in government, the
business sector, or in non-governmental conservation organizations. What is it
about conservation that makes it so vulnerable to factual manipulation?
To take a little
side-track, I was out for a walk recently on one of those rare clear Jakarta
nights, after a day of dry heat and winds. A bright full moon was out, and I
was struck by the thought that not so long ago people would have had a totally
different view of what that moon was. To most of us, it is a rocky mass
circling Earth every day, lit by the Sun, as part of a tiny solar system in a
vast galaxy called the Milky Way.
But for tens of
thousands of years people would have looked at the moon and seen something
quite different. Many considered it a deity, for example, Artemis to the Greeks
and Chandra to the Hindus. I am sure a few bright cavewomen or cavemen would
have scratched their heads and wondered why the moon moved so regularly and
changed its appearance every day. But if they did dare to speculate on their
visions and ideas, most of their cave fellows would have told them to get real
and focus on their mammoth steak instead.
For millennia, the
prevailing school of thought held that the heavens were more perfect than the
Earth and therefore all celestial bodies, including the moon, were perfectly
smooth spheres. It took a scientist, Galileo Galilei, who paid more attention
to detail, and in 1610, he noted that the moon’s surface was in fact rough and
rocky with dark, flat, low-lying regions and brighter highlands.
So, over time our
views of the moon have changed, with science informing most of our thinking.
Now back to
conservation. When I read conservation commentaries it often strikes me how
much conservation commentaries resemble those made by the cavemen of yore — no
offense to the cavemen.
Really, depending on
whether commentators hate or like conservation, they will happily pick any
information that will help them to support their views. A few examples:
When former president
Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono announced that Indonesia was going to maintain 45
percent of Kalimantan as forest, some NGOs cried out and said it was impossible
because there was only 15 percent forest left. The science on this is
undisputable, and some 50 percent of Kalimantan remains forested, so why argue
otherwise?
Recently, a regional
governmental official commenting on the establishment of oil palm made the
ludicrous statement that all oil palm was grown on areas which previously had
no forest. There are at least 50 solid scientific studies which clearly
determine that view as total nonsense.
Also, quite often when
I write in this newspaper to discuss newly published science, commentators
argue back that the science must be wrong because it doesn’t fit their beliefs
or personal observations.
Now, I would be the
last one to claim that all science is true and accurate. But at least, good
scientists always aim to be objective, transparent and repeatable in their
work. To me a good scientific study is more likely to approach reality than
personal gut feelings or generalizations based on a handful of observations.
Now, why should
conservation suffer so much from this rather creative use of facts?
Partly this is because
conservation is super complex. It deals with not just environmental and
biological issues, but also with legal, economic, social, cultural, political
and other concerns. No one quite understands how conservation works, how it is
supposed to work, or even what the ultimate goal is.
It seems that the
inherent uncertainty in conservation results in ideological positioning. One is
either opposed to or very much in favor of “conservation.” And without quite
understanding what that “conservation” means, people strengthen their arguments
by choosing the facts that support their ideology.
Fortunately, with new
scientific technologies, it is becoming increasing difficult to ignore the
facts. Twenty years ago it would have been relatively easy to make up numbers
about how much forest remained, or whether or not oil palm was established in
deforested areas. But now publicly available tools make it harder to fantasize
about this.
Still, the tendency to
ignore science remains. And scientists themselves are partly to blame for this
by burrowing their information in obscure papers that few people will ever read
or bother to understand.
It’s a bit of a
dilemma. With the world’s human population growing to over 10 billion, we will
need to seriously rethink our relationship with our environment, and how we
will survive in a world that is still pleasant to live in. Believe and hope may
help to some extent to change the human mindset. But making the practical lifestyles
changes that redefine how we live on this planet should be informed by an
objective understanding of how our actions impact the natural world. Science
has to play a key role.
In the end, whether
the moon is a rock or a deity may not matter much to us. But whether or not we
mess up our environment beyond recovery certainly does.
Erik Meijaard is a
Jakarta-based conservation scientist, coordinating the Borneo Futures program.
No comments:
Post a Comment