From declining deforestation to quitting coal, Indonesia marks a pivotal 2022
30 Dec 2022
- 2022 saw a continued decline in
deforestation in Indonesia, as well as financing deals for forest
conservation and phasing out fossil fuels, and a scramble to keep up with
changing EU timber regulations.
- The year also saw the passage of
controversial amendments to Indonesia’s criminal code, friction between
the government and researchers, and increasing concerns about the
environmental cost of the country’s nickel boom for electric vehicle
batteries.
- Here are some of the top
environment stories and trends of 2022 from one of the world’s most
important tropical forest countries.
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to the world’s third-largest expanse of tropical forest, the world’s
fourth-biggest population, and frequently ranked among the world’s top 10
greenhouse gas emitters, Indonesia is a country where what happens has a vast
effect on global biodiversity and environmental health.
Here,
assembled by Mongabay staff, are some of the top news and trends from Indonesia
in 2022.
Deforestation continues to slow
Between
2001 and 2021, Indonesia lost more than 28 million hectares (69 million acres)
of forest, an area larger than New Zealand, according to Global Forest Watch.
However, since peaking in 2016, forest loss in Indonesia has continued to
decline. According to GFW, the country lost 841,000 hectares (2.08 million
acres) of tree cover in 2021, including 203,000 hectares (502,000 acres) of
primary forest, both the lowest levels recorded since 2003. Deforestation
linked to oil palm expansion, for years a primary driver of forest loss, has
also shown a marked decline. An analysis by palm oil supply chain mapping
initiative Trase found that deforestation in
Indonesia associated with palm oil dropped by 82% in the past decade. The
trend also appears to hold across the region, with palm oil-linked
deforestation across Indonesia, Malaysia and Papua New Guinea dropping for the second year in a row in 2021,
according to a study by sustainability risk analysis organization Chain
Reaction Research. The declines, which occurred even as palm oil prices
rebounded in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, have been described as “huge huge news” and a signal that
sustainability pledges are having a real impact on deforestation.
While
the numbers have generally been met with optimism, activists note that there is
still cause for concern. “Indonesia’s forests are not yet out of danger: 2.4
million hectares [5.9 million acres] of intact forest remain in existing palm
oil concessions,” Timer Manurung, director of Indonesian environmental NGO
Auriga Nusantara, told Mongabay. “Legally speaking, companies could clear
[these] forests. Right now, there’s no legal protection.” Forests in Indonesian
Borneo and Papua are particularly in danger, Timer said.