Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumCritically endangered species in Sumatra on the road to extinction
Source: The Observer
Critically endangered species in Sumatra on the road to extinction
John Vidal
The Observer, Saturday 9 November 2013 13.06 GMT
Critically endangered wildlife, including some of the last Sumatran tigers as well as rhinos, bears and eagles, could be wiped out if plans go ahead to construct a major road through an Indonesian tropical forest reserve currently being restored by British conservationists.
The 51km-road, which would enable 850 truckloads of coal a day to be exported more easily to power stations across south-east Asia, would divide the Harapan rainforest, which is licensed by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, with the backing of the British government, the Co-op bank, the EU and birdlovers around the world.
The 98,555-hectare reserve was selectively logged in the 1970s, but is considered one of the most diverse places on Earth and a global-priority habitat for conservation, containing 20% of the remaining lowland forest of the island of Sumatra.
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The coal road is expected to be more than 50m wide and would lead from a group of five large coalmines in south Sumatra to the Lalan river in Jambi province. It would directly remove around 154 hectares of rainforest, but could affect many thousands more by splitting the forest into two physically separate concessions, allowing hunters and illegal loggers access to the forest and restricting the movement of animals and people.
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Read more: http://www.theguardian.com/environment/2013/nov/09/conservation-wildlife
bloomington-lib
(946 posts)Nihil
(13,508 posts)> The 51km-road, which would enable 850 truckloads of coal a day to be exported more easily
> to power stations across south-east Asia, would divide the Harapan rainforest, which is licensed
> by the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds, with the backing of the British government,
> the Co-op bank, the EU and birdlovers around the world.
1) Dividing the Harapan rainforest (thus splitting habitats and opening it up to illegal hunting & logging.
2) Increasing the export (and hence the extraction) of coal to be burned, screwing up the climate.
3) Destroying the trust & confidence that led major ecological organisations to fund the Indonesian
nations in return for NOT doing what they have just done.
From now on, the response will be "Fuck Indonesia" when they ask for help.
(But that will be too late for the forest or its denizens.)