Understanding the Impacts of Recurrent Peat Fires in Padang Island – Riau Province, Indonesia
Ari Susanti(1*), Oka Karyanto(2), Agus Affianto(3), Ismail Ismail(4), Satyawan Pudyatmoko(5), Trias Aditya(6), Haerudin Haerudin(7), Hendra Arditya Nainggolan(8)
(1) Faculty of Foresty, Universitas Gadjah Mada
(2) Faculty of Foresty, Universitas Gadjah Mada
(3) Faculty of Foresty, Universitas Gadjah Mada
(4) Faculty of Foresty, Universitas Gadjah Mada
(5) Departement of Forest Conservation Resources, Faculty of Forestry, Universitas Gadjah Mada
(6) Department of Geodetic Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, Universitas Gadjah Mada
(7) Department of Sociology, Faculty of Social and Political Sciences, Universitas Gadjah Mada
(8) Department of Sociology, Faculty of Social and Political Sciences, Universitas Gadjah Mada
(*) Corresponding Author
Abstract
Padang Island in Riau Province of Indonesia has been severely impacted by recurrent fires in 2014 and 2015, leading to severe peat ecosystem degradation and people´s livelihood. Therefore, analyzing the peat fires should not be isolated from socio-economic and local political context. Much has been written about peat fires especially the magnitude of the fires, however the linkages between ecological and livelihood system of peatland ecosystem gained only scant attention. This paper analyzes how the drivers of peat fires are causing a steady decline in Padang Island and aims to provide more holistic understanding on how the drivers interplay and continue to feed the process of peatland degradation with its associated impacts on local economic development and people’s livelihood. Multidisciplinary approach was applied in this study. This includes remote sensing data analysis, analysis on related documents such as historical documents and regulations. Intensive fieldwork was conducted in the island in which series of FGDs and interviews were executed. We found that the global demands for agricultural commodities have led to massive peat drainage for monoculture farming on peat lands. The high dependency on global commodity market and monoculture farming has created livelihood vulnerability, especially because of the price fluctuation of agricultural products at global market. Moreover, the monoculture farming on peat lands tends to be unsustainable since it demands peat drainage, provides less options for sources of income and tends to marginalize indigenous knowledge about farming on peatland (paludiculture) which have been practiced for centuries in the island.
Memahami Dampak Kebakaran Lahan Gambut yang Berulang di Pulau Padang-Provinsi Riau, Indonesia
Intisari
Pulau Padang yang terletak di Provinsi Riau, Indonesia mengalami kebakaran lahan gambut cukup parah dan berulang pada tahun 2014 dan 2015 yang mengakibatkan degradasi ekosistem gambut dan kehidupan masyarakat. Oleh karena itu, seharusnya analisis kebakaran lahan gambut tidak dapat dapat dipisahkan dari konteks sosial ekonomi dan politik lokal. Sudah banyak tulisan yang menganalisis tentang kebakaran lahan gambut terutama terkait dengan besarnya kebakaran, tetapi sangat sedikit yang menganalisis hubungan antara sistem ekologi dan sistem kehidupan masyarakat. Artikel ini menganalisis bagaimana faktor-faktor penyebab kebakaran lahan gambut juga mengakibatkan degradasi yang terusmenerus di Pulau Padang dan bertujuan untuk berkontribusi pada pemahaman yang lebih menyeluruh mengenai bagaimana faktor-faktor tersebut bekerja, saling terkait, dan secara terus-menerus mempengaruhi proses degradasi lahan gambut serta dampaknya terhadap pembangunan ekonomi lokal dan kehidupan masyarakat. Penelitian ini menerapkan pendekatan multi-disiplin yang meliputi analisis data penginderaan jauh, dokumen sejarah dan peraturan terkait. Penelitian lapangan dilakukan secara intensif di Pulau Padang, meliputi serial diskusi kelompok terfokus dan wawancara. Kami menemukan bahwa permintaan pasar global akan komoditas pertanian berkontribusi terhadap drainase lahan gambut skala besar untuk pertanian monokultur pada lahan gambut. Tingginya ketergantungan terhadap pasar global komoditas dan pertanian monokultur telah menciptakan kehidupan masyarakat yang rentan. Hal ini terutama karena besarnya fluktuasi harga komoditas pertanian di pasar global. Di samping itu, pertanian monokultur pada lahan gambut cenderung tidak berkelanjutan karena mensyaratkan pengeringan lahan gambut dengan drainase, menawarkan pilihan sumber penghasilan masyarakat yang lebih sedikit dan meminggirkan pengetahuan lokal tentang paludikultur yang sudah dipraktekkan selama berabad-abad di Pulau Padang.
Keywords
Full Text:
PDFReferences
Ali M. 2012. Klaim RAPP atas Pulau Padang matikan penghasilan warga lokal. http://www.mongabay.co.id/2012/09/27/klaim-rapp-atas-pulau-padang-matikan-penghasilan-warga-lokal/. Accessed September 2015.
Andriesse J. 1988. Nature and management of tropical peat soils. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of United Nations, Rome.
Barbier E. 2007. Frontiers and sustainable economic development. Environmental and Resource Economics 37(1): 271-295.
Brady MA. 1997. Organic matter dynamics of coastal peat deposits in Sumatra, Indonesia, University of British Columbia.
Budidarsono S, Rahmanulloh A, Sofiyuddin M. 2012. Economics assessment of palm oil production. Technical Brief (26): Palm oil series. Bogor, Indonesia: World Agroforestry Centre Southeast Asia Program.
Central Bureau of Statistics. 2016. Kepulauan Meranti Regency in figures. Badan Pusat Statistik Kabupaten Kepulauan Meranti.
Durham WH. 1995. Political ecology and environmental destruction in Latin America. Pages 249-264 in Painter M, Durham WH, editor. The social causes of environmental destruction in Latin America. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, USA.
Deutsche Welle. 2015. 7 eksekutif perusahaan ditahan karena kebakaran hutan, termasuk dari Malaysia dan Singapura. http://www.dw.com/id/7-eksekutifperusahaan-ditahan-karena-kebakaran-hutan-termasuk-dari-malaysia-dan-singapura/a-18719551. Accessed September 2015.
Hooijer A, Page S, Jauhiainen J, Lee W, Lu X, Idris A, Anshari G. 2012. Subsidence and carbon loss in drained tropical peatlands. Biogeosciences 9(3): 1053.
Hooijer A, Page S, Navratil P, Vernimmen R, van der Vat M, Tansey K, Konecny K, Siegert F, Ballhorn U, Mawdsley N. 2014. Carbon emissions from drained and degraded peatland in Indonesia and emission factors for measurement, reporting and verification (MRV) of peatland greenhouse gas emissions: A summary of KFCP research results for practitioners. Scientific Report. Jakarta, Indonesia: IAFCP.
Ho'scilo A. 2009. Fire regime, vegetation dynamics and land cover change in tropical peatland, Indonesia. University of Leicester.
Jauhiainen J, Hooijer A, Page S. 2012. Carbon dioxide emissions from an Acacia plantation on peatland in Sumatra, Indonesia. Biogeosciences 9:617-630.
Karyanto O, Rohman, Yuwono T, Riyanto S, Widayanti WT, Susanti A, Pudyatmoko S. 2016. Farming on undrained peatland in Riau, Indonesia: Implication for sustainability. 15th International Peat Congress. Serawak, Malaysia.
Miettinen J, Hooijer A, Tollenaar D, Page S, Malins C, Vernimmen R, Shi C, Liew SC. 2012. Historical analysis and projection of oil palm plantation expansion on peatland in Southeast Asia. ICCT White Paper, 17.
Obidzinski K, Kusters K. 2015. Formalizing the logging sector in Indonesia: Historical dynamics and lessons for current policy initiatives. Society & Natural Resources 28(5):530-542.
Page SE, Banks CJ, Rieley JO. 2007. Tropical peatlands: Distribution, extent and carbon storage-uncertainties and knowledge gaps. Peatlands International 2(2):26-27.
Susanti A. 2016. Oil palm expansion in Indonesia: Serving people, planet and profit? Eburon Academic Publishers, Delft, The Netherlands.
Susanti A, Burgers P. 2012. Oil palm expansion: Competing claim of lands for food, biofuels, and conservation. In Press, In Behnassi M, Pollmann O, Kissinger G, editor. Sustainable food security in the era of local and global environmantal change. Springer, Dordrecht, The Netherlands: in press.
Susanti A, Budidarsono S. 2014. Land governance and oil palm development: Examples from Riau Province, Indonesia, in the global land grab: Beyond the hype. Pages 119-132. Zed Books, London.
Susanti A, Maryudi A. 2016. Development narratives, notions of forest crisis, and boom of oil palm plantations in Indonesia. Forest Policy and Economics 73: 130-139.
Tomich TP, Fagi AM, De Foresta H, Michon G, Murdiyarso D, Stolle F, Van Noordwijk M. 1998. Indonesia’s fires: smoke as a problem, smoke as a symptom. Agroforestry Today 10:4-7.
Turner BL. 1990. The earth as transformed by human action: Global and regional changes in the biosphere over the past 300 years. CUP Archive.
Wösten J, Clymans E, Page S, Rieley J, Limin S. 2008. Peat–water interrelationships in a tropical peatland ecosystem in Southeast Asia. CATENA 73(2):212-224.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.22146/jik.34126
Article Metrics
Abstract views : 4275 | views : 2685Refbacks
- There are currently no refbacks.
Copyright (c) 2018 Jurnal Ilmu Kehutanan
License URL: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/
© Editorial Board Jurnal Ilmu Kehutanan
Faculty of Forestry, Universitas Gadjah Mada
Building D 2nd floor
Jl. Agro No 1, Bulaksumur, Sleman 55281
Phone. +62-274-512102, +62-274-550541, +62-274-6491420
Fax. +62-274-550541 E-mail : jik@ugm.ac.id
former website : jurnal.ugm.ac.id/jikfkt/
new website : jurnal.ugm.ac.id/v3/jik/
Indexed by:
Jurnal Ilmu Kehutanan is under the license of Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International