Indonesia's REDD+ Task Force will investigate charges that PT Menteng Jaya Sawit Perdana (PT Menteng), a palm oil company owned by Malaysia-based Kuala Lumpur Kepong Berhad (KLK), has cleared peat forest in breach of the country's newly-signed moratorium on the granting of new forestry licenses on peatlands and in primary forest areas.
The allegation was levied by the Environmental Investigative Agency, an international NGO, and Telapak, an Indonesian group, after an on-the-ground undercover investigation. EIA and Telapak found that PT Menteng had cleared peat forest near Sampit in Indonesia's Central Kalimantan province without securing proper licenses. PT Menteng had only a Location Permit, not the Plantation Business Permit required under Indonesian plantation law or a permit from the Ministry of Forestry releasing the 7,400-ha (18,300-acre) concession.
PT Menteng's parent company KLK has since called the accusation "preposterous", yet has failed to produce any evidence showing that it has secured the proper permits, according to EIA.
"EIA and Telapak's evidence shows that the KLK subsidiary PT Menteng was systematically clearing land within Indonesia’s moratorium zone in the REDD+ Pilot Province," EIA's Tomasz Johnson told mongabay.com.
The allegation was levied by the Environmental Investigative Agency, an international NGO, and Telapak, an Indonesian group, after an on-the-ground undercover investigation. EIA and Telapak found that PT Menteng had cleared peat forest near Sampit in Indonesia's Central Kalimantan province without securing proper licenses. PT Menteng had only a Location Permit, not the Plantation Business Permit required under Indonesian plantation law or a permit from the Ministry of Forestry releasing the 7,400-ha (18,300-acre) concession.
PT Menteng's parent company KLK has since called the accusation "preposterous", yet has failed to produce any evidence showing that it has secured the proper permits, according to EIA.
"EIA and Telapak's evidence shows that the KLK subsidiary PT Menteng was systematically clearing land within Indonesia’s moratorium zone in the REDD+ Pilot Province," EIA's Tomasz Johnson told mongabay.com.
"Plantation licensing records held by the Provincial and Central governments, also held by EIA, indicate that KLK does not have a plantation business operation permit for PT Menteng, nor has the land in question been released from the forest estate by the Ministry of Forestry."
In comments emailed to Reuters, KLK admitted a small area of potential illegal clearing by a contractor, but asserted it had secured a permit in 2009, two years before the moratorium went into affect. By EIA also cast doubt on those claims.
"KLK’s claim that an 'over-eager' contractor may have cleared 70 hectares does nothing to address [its lack of the proper permits]," said Johnson. "Nor does KLK’s claim to have obtained a plantation business permit for 6,000 hectares in 2009 clarify the matter any further. They refer to 'Kalimantan province', which doesn't exist, and don't stipulate which of their numerous concessions or subsidiaries the permit is supposedly for - in Central Kalimantan alone KLK has at least three concessions operating in just under 30,000 ha. "
"KLK's own company report from 2010 makes no reference to a plantation business permit for PT Menteng. Our evidence stacks up, KLK's doesn't."
To bolster its case, EIA released a trove of video, photos, and GPS coordinates. Last week, EIA and Telapak issued a joint report — Caught REDD Handed — detailing the alleged transgressions by PT Menteng.
In comments emailed to Reuters, KLK admitted a small area of potential illegal clearing by a contractor, but asserted it had secured a permit in 2009, two years before the moratorium went into affect. By EIA also cast doubt on those claims.
"KLK’s claim that an 'over-eager' contractor may have cleared 70 hectares does nothing to address [its lack of the proper permits]," said Johnson. "Nor does KLK’s claim to have obtained a plantation business permit for 6,000 hectares in 2009 clarify the matter any further. They refer to 'Kalimantan province', which doesn't exist, and don't stipulate which of their numerous concessions or subsidiaries the permit is supposedly for - in Central Kalimantan alone KLK has at least three concessions operating in just under 30,000 ha. "
"KLK's own company report from 2010 makes no reference to a plantation business permit for PT Menteng. Our evidence stacks up, KLK's doesn't."
To bolster its case, EIA released a trove of video, photos, and GPS coordinates. Last week, EIA and Telapak issued a joint report — Caught REDD Handed — detailing the alleged transgressions by PT Menteng.
The allegations are especially damaging because the investigation occurred the day the forest moratorium was officially defined by Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono. The two-year moratorium is part of Indonesia's commitment to reduce emissions from deforestation and peatlands degradation under a $1 billion REDD+ agreement with Norway. Central Kalimantan, the province where the alleged clearing took place, is the pilot province for Indonesia's REDD+ program.
The report also caused some discomfort in Norway by highlighting the Norwegian government's $41 million investment in KLK. The KLK shares are held in Norway's pension fund portfolio, which also includes other logging and plantation companies linked to deforestation in Indonesia.
"Norway’s Government Pension Fund Global (GPFG) has investments in scores of plantation and logging companies in Indonesia, including four major groups operating 24 plantation subsidiaries without relevant permits in the Central Kalimantan Pilot Province," said EIA in a statement. "Norway has made roughly five times more money from plantations and logging in Indonesia and neighboring countries during the past year – including illegal operations – than it has granted to Indonesia thus far under the US$1bn REDD+ Letter of Intent." Source: Mongabay
The report also caused some discomfort in Norway by highlighting the Norwegian government's $41 million investment in KLK. The KLK shares are held in Norway's pension fund portfolio, which also includes other logging and plantation companies linked to deforestation in Indonesia.
"Norway’s Government Pension Fund Global (GPFG) has investments in scores of plantation and logging companies in Indonesia, including four major groups operating 24 plantation subsidiaries without relevant permits in the Central Kalimantan Pilot Province," said EIA in a statement. "Norway has made roughly five times more money from plantations and logging in Indonesia and neighboring countries during the past year – including illegal operations – than it has granted to Indonesia thus far under the US$1bn REDD+ Letter of Intent." Source: Mongabay
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