By Ahmad Maryudi
The
Brunei
Times
(Sunday,
July
12
2009)
THE
Golden
Triangle
is
often
referred
to
the
"notorious"
border zone
between Myanmar, Thailand and Laos. The area was once the world's most
prolific supplier of opium. However, the world has now found a new
"Golden Triangle", which is hailed to be very essential for the
survival of human beings and the planet. It is transboundary highlands
of Borneo, which covering not less than 20 million hectares across
Brunei Darussalam, Indonesia and Malaysia — often referred to as the
Heart of Borneo. HoB is one of the only three grand blocks of
rainforest remaining on Earth, apart from those of the Amazon and Congo.
According
to
WWF,
the
area
offers
a
variety
of
landscapes, not only tropical rain
forests, but also mangroves, peat swamps and freshwater swamp forests,
lowland dipterocarp forests, ironwood forests, heath forests and
montane forests. It contains a golden global treasure, the
mega-biodiversity with abundance of endemic species, flora and fauna.
Also worth to mention, the Heart of Borneo is home of some millions
indigenous people, most notable Dayak.
However,
the
forest
tracts
are
severely
threatened
by
various
(notably commercial)
activities. For decades, forests have been under pressure of rampant
logging. Between 1985-2000, more timber were hauled from Borneo
(particularly in Indonesia and Malaysia) than a sum from Amazon and
Africa. These days, logging activities move further into the most
remote areas. The forest integrity is further fragmented with the
constructions of roads and skid trails.
In
recent
years,
forest
conversions
into
"economically
attractive"
plantations,
most notably
palm oil, have exponentially expanded. Oil palm plantations in
Kalimantan, the Indonesian part of Heart of Borneo, grew by
approximately 10 per cent to nearly a million hectares between 2002 and
2003 and plans for further expansions of some million hectares have
been approved.
Due
to
its
importance,
the
border
zone
forest
needs
holistic management approaches before it is further depleted. The
most important is common and coherent policy platforms of the three
nations. The plan is not as simple as it sounds. The three countries
have developed such approaches by signing an MOU on forest
conservation, but it needs to be translated into more practical and
executable actions. The "umbrella policy" to conserve the forest
resources must consists of two-tier approaches; harmonisation between
sectors in the respective countries and the creation of coherent
trilateral policy.
The
first
approach
proves
to
be
a
huge
challenge,
indeed. Intersectoral policy has rarely been successfully
created. Different sectors such as forestry, industry, energy, and
agriculture, promote their own objectives, which often contradict each
other. Environmental goals in forest managements are still overshadowed
by concerns for economic development. Sectoral policies which encourage
massive expansion of palm oil plantations, clearly pose real threat to
the conservation of the forests. At both Malaysian and Indonesian
parts, legal and illegal logging are still rampant. Even for legal
logging, it is still beyond the capacity of the forests to regenerate
themselves. The decentralisation policy in Indonesia also appears to
complicate the efforts toward the more coherent and intersectoral
policy. Both provincial and district governments create and promote
different policies from central government.
The
second
approach
is
no
less-strenuous
either.
Forest
conservation
and management
strategies vary greatly amongst the respective countries. The policy of
one of these countries might even put pressure to the others. The
simple example is the alleged transboundary timber smugglings, across
Indonesian and Malaysian borders.
To
create
a
coherent
policy
platform,
the
countries
should
work together more actively. They should
promote more collaborative programmes on conservation and sustainable
forest management. This should be supported by strong foundations such
as effective information-sharing mechanisms. This is so far the weak
point of the current trilateral collaboration.
