The disbanding of a key agency could threaten conservation efforts.
In 2013, then Indonesian president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono established
the National REDD+ Agency, the world’s first executive-level agency specially
designated to tackle Indonesia’s myriad forestry and conservation issues. The agency was
lauded at home and abroad as both a landmark achievement and a sign of hope for
a country considered a poster child for environmental degradation.
A little
more than a year later, on January 21, 2015, the once-independent organization
has effectively ceased to exist after being merged with Indonesia’s Environment
and Forestry Ministry. The move has left many wondering what the future will
hold for Indonesia’s conservation efforts, as well as international
coordination on combatting climate change.
“[Domestically],
the merger will significantly slow things down,” former REDD+ chairman Heru
Prasetyo told The Diplomat. “Internationally, questions will be raised
as to Indonesia’s commitment to emissions reduction and beyond.”
The
institution was founded as a result of four years of negotiations. It was funded by the
Norwegian government under the United Nations-backed Reducing Emissions from
Deforestation and forest Degradation (REDD+) scheme in order to clarify land
administration, review the legality of licensing and concessions, secure
community tenure rights and combat the extractive and exploitative interests
that have often plagued Indonesia’s forestry and land-use sectors.
While
REDD+ has been marked by controversy in countries like Panama and Guyana and has faced
hefty challenges in Brazil and the
Democratic Republic of Congo, in Indonesia, REDD+ appeared to have paved
the way for some long-awaited reforms. The agency led efforts to implement a historic Constitutional Court
ruling that essentially annulled state control of customary forests
in favor of indigenous peoples,
and spearheaded bold initiatives
to protect precious peatlands and forests in some of the country’s most at-risk
areas.
Indonesia’s
progress in operationalizing REDD+ even earned Yudhoyono a Champion of the Planet
designation from the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP).
“The
REDD+ agency has embarked on… [a] campaign to reshape the REDD+ agenda with
some successes — it is not only about carbon emissions, but also about
giving equal attention to the real drivers and consequence bearers of
deforestation and misuse of land,” Heru said.
Regardless,
Yudhoyono was considered by some to be a lame duck president, and his 10 years
in office were mostly characterized by sluggish bureaucracy reform and a
general stasis — especially with regard to environmental reform. Indonesia’s
assault on its own forests chugged along under his watch, leading to the
country’s deforestation rate passing that of Brazil’s
last year.
Enter
newly elected president Joko “Jokowi” Widodo, a man largely viewed as a
populist and a breath of fresh air in a country historically mired in
corruption and kleptocracy. Jokowi, who studied forestry in university, has
decided to absorb REDD+ into its new super-ministry in an attempt to undertake
an ambitious reform campaign while dismantling institutions seen as
unnecessary.
“The
Government believes [REDD+’s] existence gets in the way of Jokowi’s
approach to governance reform,” Heru said. “It is seen as an unwanted
‘shadow structure.’”
But
eliminating this “shadow structure” has highlighted just how shadowy some of
the details surrounding the decision are. The presidential decree does not
specifically stipulate how this merger will be handled or how REDD+’s previous
programs will be continued. Nor is it clear how coordination between Indonesia
and international partners such as Norway will continue in the future.
“The
merger of REDD+ and [the Environment and Forestry] is disquieting, [especially]
if the [ministry] applies the paradigm of the old order,” Abdon Nababan, the
secretary-General of the Indigenous Peoples’ Alliance of the Archipelago
(AMAN), recently tweeted.
Environment
and Forestry Ministry restructuring committee head San Afri Awang told the Jakarta Post
that select members of the now-inoperative REDD+ agency would be held on as
consultants. He also assured that international partners have nothing to worry
about and that Indonesia would still be participating in this year’s UN Climate
Change Conference in Paris.
“In time,
we will talk [with Norway],” he told the Post. “We are hoping that
Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi will come [and join the discussion]. We cannot
close our eyes to the international perspective, so we are making sure to tell
the international world that there will be no shock [to Indonesia’s commitment
to reducing greenhouse gas emissions].”
Norway
has yet to issue a statement on the matter. However, Norwegian Embassy
Counsellor Per Kristian Roer wrote in an email to The Diplomat that the
country has “taken note” of Jokowi’s decree and is waiting on “Indonesia to
contact us on how to continue the bilateral work on REDD+.”
Indonesia
has, to an extent, decided that it will effectively handle what it considers a
domestic issue (albeit with huge global consequences) on its own terms. As
such, it remains to be seen if the country’s government will have the capacity
to continue REDD+’s ambitious programs while undertaking its own lofty structural
reforms simultaneously.
What is
important now, according to Heru, is that the new ministry’s initiatives are
properly monitored and its functions remain transparent.
“A way of
working together among stakeholders — the government, the private sector,
communities, scientific communities, media — [must be] established and
practiced with respect and a clearly shared direction,” he said.
Ethan
Harfenist is a freelance journalist. He has written widely about Indonesia for several publications
including The Jakarta Globe.
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