Monday 2 November 2015

Indonesia’s fires have burnt land the size of Hunter Valley and spewed more greenhouse gases than the US — but there’s hope


Indonesia’s fires have burnt land the size of Hunter Valley and spewed more greenhouse gases than the US — but there’s hope
THERE is hope in sight for Indonesia, which has been battling out of control fires for weeks.
Persistent rains have cleared the air across vast stretches of Southeast Asia that have choked for weeks on hazardous smoke from the fires, with officials expressing hope the crisis could soon end.
And while this comes as welcome news, the fires have already left a trail of destruction and 19 people dead.
Indonesian authorities say 19 people have died either fighting the fires or due to the smoke, and that half a million Indonesians are suffering from respiratory illness.
The fires have also currently burnt land the size roughly of NSW’s Hunter Valley.
Indonesia’s National Space and Aviation Agency said so far 21,000 square kilometres of forests and peatland had been cleared.
Orangutans, clouded leopards, sun bears, gibbons, the Sumatran rhinoceros and Sumatran tiger, are also among the threatened species being forced from their homes by the fires according to Charles Pierce writing for Esquire.
The US-based World Resources Institute has said that at their peak the fires were spewing more greenhouse gases into the atmosphere each day than the United States, the world’s second-largest emitter of the gases blamed for global warming.
The first taste of clean air
Parts of Indonesia, Malaysia, and Singapore have enjoyed the cleanest air in two months, while affected areas of the Philippines and Thailand also gained a respite from pollution that has sickened hundreds of thousands, disrupted air travel and fuelled anger at Jakarta.
“We can see clouds again!” Singapore Defence Minister Ng Eng Hen gushed in a Facebook post that included a picture of now-unfamiliar blue skies taken from his office.
“I am sure that all of us in Singapore woke up this morning and felt so good that we had clear blue skies again.”
Malaysia’s top weather forecaster declared the region’s rainy season — crucial to putting out the annual outbreak of smoke-belching Indonesian forest and agricultural fires — had begun.
“We should have blue skies and no more haze,” Che Gayah Ismail, director-general of the country’s Meteorological Department, told AFP, adding that any further smoke would be blown away from the region.
The fires and resulting region-wide pollution occur to varying degrees each year during the dry season as vast Indonesian plantation lands are illegally cleared by burning.
Rains ‘welcomed with joy’
Experts had warned that this year’s outbreak was on track to become the worst yet due to bone-dry conditions caused by the El Niño phenomenon, which alters weather patterns across the Pacific basin.
Fears had grown that the rainy season could be delayed for months, prolonging the health and environmental disaster.
Indonesian officials are yet to declare that the corner had been turned in the battle against the haze.
But its disaster agency spokesman Sutopo Purwo Nugroho said recent rainfall on the huge islands of Sumatra and Borneo — where hundreds of fires have smouldered since July — has dramatically reduced the smoke, and that more precipitation was expected.
Affected communities “welcomed this with joy and said grace after two months of being held captive to haze,” Sutopo said in a statement.
The rains there included both natural and artificially induced showers from cloud-seeding, he added.
The semi-annual crisis brings recurring pressure on Indonesia, which has failed over the years to rein in the planters accused of starting the fires.
Jakarta agreed earlier this month to accept international help after failing for weeks to douse the blazes, and has employed dozens of planes and thousands of personnel on the ground in a firefighting campaign.
Residents of Palangkaraya, an Indonesian city on Borneo where the intense fires have created eerie yellow skies and unbreathable air, expressed relief at seeing patches of blue up above for the first time.
Schools that were closed for health reasons have begun reopening, and children in uniforms were seen riding bikes without masks.
“Finally I can breathe normally,” said Suratmini, 34, a Palangkaraya resident who like many Indonesians goes by one name.
“It’s good for the children as well because they can go to school.” Environment ministers from the 10-country Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) met on Wednesday and Thursday about the issue in Hanoi.
“The ministers expressed concern over the unprecedented severity and geographical spread of the recent smoke haze affecting various ASEAN countries,” a statement afterwards said, but no new measures were announced.
But Environment Minister Masagos Zulkifli of Singapore, which has been particularly critical of Indonesia, said Jakarta must do more to punish plantation firms in order to prevent the problem recurring.
He issued a statement calling on Indonesia to release more information on companies suspected in the blazes and the enforcement actions it was taking.
“We need to prevent these companies from starting fires, mismanaging land, and causing harm to people in the region,” he said.
Singapore last month launched legal action that could lead to massive fines against Indonesian companies.

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