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NASA-LCLUC Science Team Joint Meeting with MAIRS, GOFC-GOLD and SEA START Programs on Land-Cover/Land-Use Change Processes in Monsoon Asia RegionJanuary 12-17, 2009 in Khon Kaen, Thailand
FORESTINTERNATIONAL
NATIONAL
UNFCCCCBD,
UNCCD etc
UNFF, FAO, APFC, ASEAN,
F11 etc.
ITTOWTO Social/
livelihood
Environmental services
National revenue
Other sector development
Source:Nur Masripatin, Secretary for Forestry Research and Development Agency, MOFIndonesia’s SNC to the UNFCCC Meeting, Bogor, December 2009
SFM
Contribute to Climate Change
mitigation
Avoiding forest & land degradation
Avoiding biodiversity
lossReducing
deforestation
Poverty alleviation
SFM: Sustainable Forest Management
Source:Nur Masripatin, Secretary for Forestry Research and Development Agency, MOFIndonesia’s SNC to the UNFCCC Meeting, Bogor, December 2009
FOREST LAND
FOREST LAND : Ministry of ForestryNON-FOREST LAND: Other Ministries
LAND USE
NON-FOREST LAND
FORESTED AREA
NON-FORESTED AREALAND COVER
FORESTED-FOREST LAND
NON FORESTED-FOREST LAND
FORESTED-NON FOREST LAND NON FORESTED-NON FOREST LAND
FORESTPLANTATION:-REHABILITATION-REFORESTATION-AFFORESTATION
PROTECTED FOREST
LIMITED PRODUCTION FOREST
PRODUCTION FOREST
CONVERTEDPRODUCTION FOREST
CONSERVATIONFOREST
NON-FOREST LAND
Forestland:-Conservation-Protection-Production
FOREST LAND
NON-FOREST LAND
70,5%FOREST LAND
(132.397.729 ha)
29,5%NON
FOREST LAND(55.386.922 ha)
LAND COVERFOREST LAND NON-FOREST LAND TOTAL
Area (ha) % Area (ha) % Area (ha) %
FOREST 90.135.457 48,0% 8.324.734 4,4% 98.460.191 52,4%
NON FOREST 39.276.188 20,9% 46.490.541 24,8% 85.766.729 45,7%
NO DATA 2.986.084 1,6% 571.647 0,3% 3.557.731 1,9%
Total 132.397.729 70,5% 55.386.922 29,5% 187.784.651 100,0%
Sources: Landsat 7 ETM+ 2005/2006
INTERNATIONAL Politics-economy (e.g. development outside negotiations e.g. REDD,
USA and other developed countries position, developing countries lack of resources,)
Technical/ methodological/ scientific (many outstanding methodological aspects demand for further works)
Equity (Annex 1 vs. non-Annex 1, among Annex 1, among non-Annex 1)
NATIONAL Survival (vulnerability from biophysical conditions, economy and social) Social (livelihood) to make sure local community interests are taken
care of,
NATIONAL INTERNASIONAL ISSUE Social (livelihood, indigenous and local community rights, social equity) Governance Forest condition (case : Indonesia, e.g. deforestation, forest fire, illegal
logging)
Enhancing sink capacity of forest: plantation including forest restoration, rehabilitation of degraded forest and land,
Conserving carbon stocks: forest conservation
Reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation: SFM, combating illegal logging, forest fire management, reducing forest conversion and forest encroachment.
Sustainability of forest resources is crucial for the continuation of national development,
Sustainable management of forest resources is a form of mitigation and adaptation measures, but not explicitly stated in forestry planning.
Adaptation and mitigation is survival issue.
5 PRIORITY POLICIES (2005-2009) CONTRIBUTION TO CLIMATE CHANGE MITIGATION AND ADAPTATION
1. Combating illegal logging and its associated trade
Reduce emission
2. Forest & land rehabilitation andforest conservation
• Enhance sink,• Reduce emission,• Carbon conservation,enhance resilient
3. Forestry sector restructuring • Reduce emission,• Enhance sink
4. Community empowerment • Reduce emission,• Enhance sink
5. Securing forest land Enabling conditions
Combating illegal logging law enforcement, inter-sectoral approach
Forest & land rehabilitation (5 million ha between 2003-2009, 1 million tree plantation before COP-13, 100 million tree plantation started in 2008) and forest conservation (institutional strengthening in protected area management)
Forestry sector restructuring through enhancement of timber plantation and industry restructuring 9 million ha by 2014 using genetically improved seeds, improved production forest management
Community empowerment Community forest (HTR 5.4 million ha by 2014, HR 8 million ha by 2025)
Securing forest land (strengthening the legal status of state forest land)
Supporting initiatives : • Improving forest monitoring system• Improving forest governance – increased transparency, combating
corruption
Financial (the gaps between available domestic funds and the magnitude of the problem to be dealt with)
Market failure for forest products and services (e.g. market of illegal forest products, A/R CDM)
Technical/ Methodological and capacity issues
Institutional and governance issues
Extensive data collections have been carried out by the Ministry of Forestry (MoF) since 1985, using various remotely sensed data (Landsat MSS/TM/ ETM+, SPOT Vegetation, MODIS and other sources of data),
Field plot data from about 2,000 permanent plots which were established in 1993 (National Forest Inventory: Indonesia – FAO project), PSPs in concession areas and research forests
Three periods of monitoring (1985-1997, 1997-2000, 2000-2005), in collaboration with South Dakota State University and Wageningen University. The monitoring system analyzed land-cover change through time both inside and outside forest lands.
Data on forest cover changes over time are not readily available data created as a one time mapping exercise to create
maps to facilitate better planning and forest management
to create these maps needs considerable time and effort to gather information and carry out interpretation archipelago wide land cover maps often needs more than one year to produce
the maps often do not have uniform date over the entire map, which may have considerable influence on the calculation of annual change.
Considerable improvement is needed.
IFCA: Indonesian Forest Carbon Alliance
PATH/ROW LANDSAT DATA
Remark: Landsat 7 ETM+ coverage for the whole Indonesia (204 scene)
DEFORESTATIONForest Non Forest
FOREST DEGRADATION
I (100-80%) II (80-60%) III (60-40%) IV (40-20%) V (20-0%)
Dumai, Riau – 2000/09/05
INDONESIALAND COVER MAP
2005/2006
No. MoF Land Cover Class1 PRIMARY DRYLAND FOREST2 SECONDARY DRYLAND FOREST3 PRIMARY SWAMP FOREST4 SECONDARY SWAMP FOREST5 PRIMARY MANGROVE FOREST6 SECONDARY MANGROVE FOREST7 PLANTATION FOREST8 DRYLAND AGRICULTURE9 SHRUB-MIXED DRYLAND FARM10 TRANSMIGRATION AREA11 RICE FIELD12 ESTATE CROPPLANTATION13 GRASSLAND14 BUSH/SHRUB15 SWAMP16 SWAMP SHRUB17 SETTLEMENT AREA18 BARREN LAND19 FISH POND20 AIRPORT21 MINING AREA22 WATER23 CLOUD COVERED
No. IPCC Class1 Forestland2 Cropland3 Grassland4 Wetland5 Settlement6 Other Land
LAYOUT PLOT KLASTER
A Cluster has 9 Tract
Tract Temporary Sample Plot (TSP) contains 8 Sub Plot.
Permanent Sample Plot (PSP)Only in Tract #5, (100 m x 100 m) with 16 RU (record unit)
LULUCF: Ministry of Forestry Ministry of Agriculture Ministry of Public Works Ministry of Home Affairs – Local Governments
Spatial data (BAKOSURTANAL : national coordinator, MoF: ‘custodian’ for forest areas.
Related Ministries/Institutions: Ministry of National Development Ministry of Finance Ministry of Environment Ministry of Foreign Affairs National Council on Climate Change Others (LAPAN, BBPT, Univ etc)challenges in coordination and synergy
Many initiatives/ programmes/ activities carried out by related institutions/ organizations, but lack of synergy, monitoring and evaluation,
High political will from the top authority (e.g. National Action Plan on Mitigation and Adaptation) but slow progress in integrating to national and sectoral planning including in budget allocation.
Climate Change is not simply environmental issue,
Climate change is sustainable development issues (Economy, Social, Environment)
More reliable GHGs inventory data for LULUCF is critical.
More support and study on forest carbon mapping methodology, baseline/ REL (Reference Emission Level)
DR. Ir. Ruandha Agung Sugardiman, M.Sc.MINISTRY OF FORESTRY
DIRECTORATE GENERAL OF FOREST PLANING