Back to Home Page
Afghanistan
Albania
Algeria
American Samoa
Andorra
Angola
Anguilla
Antigua and Barbuda
Argentina
Armenia
Aruba
Australia
Austria
Azerbaijan
Bahamas
Bahrain
Bangladesh
Barbados
Belarus
Belgium
Belize
Benin
Bermuda
Bhutan
Bolivia
Bosnia Herzegovina
Botswana
Brazil
Brunei Darussalam
Bulgaria
Burkina Faso
Burundi
Cabo Verde
Cambodia
Cameroon
Canada
Cayman Islands
Central African Republic
Chad
Chile
China
China, Macao SAR
Colombia
Comoros
Costa Rica
Côte d'Ivoire
Croatia
Cuba
Cyprus
Czechia
Democratic People's Republic of Korea
Democratic Republic of the Congo
Denmark
Djibouti
Dominica
Dominican Republic
Ecuador
Egypt
El Salvador
Equatorial Guinea
Eritrea
Estonia
Ethiopia
Fiji
Finland
France
French Guiana
Gabon
Gambia
Georgia
Germany
Ghana
Greece
Greenland
Grenada
Guam
Guatemala
Guinea
Guinea-Bissau
Guyana
Haiti
Honduras
Hong Kong
Hungary
Iceland
India
Indonesia
Iran
Iraq
Ireland
Israel
Italy
Jamaica
Japan
Jersey, Channel Islands
Jordan
Kazakhstan
Kenya
Kiribati
Kosovo
Kuwait
Kyrgyzstan
Lao People's Democratic Republic
Latvia
Lebanon
Lesotho
Liberia
Libya
Liechtenstein
Lithuania
Luxembourg
Madagascar
Malawi
Malaysia
Maldives
Mali
Malta
Marshall Islands
Martinique
Mauritania
Mauritius
Mexico
Micronesia, Fed. Sts.
Monaco
Mongolia
Montenegro
Morocco
Mozambique
Myanmar
Namibia
Nauru
Nepal
Netherlands
New Zealand
Nicaragua
Niger
Nigeria
North Macedonia
Norway
Oman
Pakistan
Palau
Panama
Papua New Guinea
Paraguay
Peru
Philippines
Poland
Portugal
Puerto Rico
Qatar
Rep. of Korea
Republic of Moldova
Republic of the Congo
Réunion
Romania
Russian Federation
Rwanda
Saint Kitts and Nevis
Saint Lucia
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines
Samoa
San Marino
Sao Tome and Principe
Saudi Arabia
Senegal
Serbia
Seychelles
Sierra Leone
Singapore
Slovakia
Slovenia
Solomon Islands
Somalia
South Africa
South Sudan
Spain
Sri Lanka
Sudan
Suriname
Swaziland
Sweden
Switzerland
Syria
Taiwan, China
Tajikistan
Thailand
Timor-Leste
Togo
Tonga
Trinidad and Tobago
Tunisia
Turkey
Turkmenistan
Tuvalu
Uganda
Ukraine
United Arab Emirates
United Kingdom
United Republic of Tanzania
Uruguay
USA
Uzbekistan
Vanuatu
Venezuela
Vietnam
Virgin Islands (U.S.)
West Bank and Gaza
Yemen
Zambia
Zimbabwe
Risk Score
49.8
Risk Profile
Medium Risk
Conflict State
No
Log Export Restriction
Yes
Other Timber Export Restrictions
Yes
Import Regulation
Yes
Legality Risks Click for details on legality risks

Indonesia is the first, and currently, only, country in the world with an operational Forest Law Enforcement Governance and Trade (FLEGT) licensing scheme. This means that the Government of Indonesia has made significant efforts to develop a mandatory national system to track and verify legality and control illegal timber, called the Sistem Verifikasi Legalitas Kayu (SVLK), which was established in 2009. Indonesia began issuing FLEGT licenses on 15 November 2016. The SVLK covers 99 percent of the total concession area as of 2019. While Indonesia has put in place a national system to track and verify legality and control illegal timber imported into the country, corruption in Indonesia across the board, particularly at the local level, remains an issue that can undermine the system. Some early challenges should be expected given that this is a new system and the first such FLEGT licensing scheme operating globally.

In Europe, the SVLK has been recognized as meeting the standards set by the European Union Timber Regulation (EUTR) since November 2016 and EU and UK importers are no longer required to conduct due diligence checks on timber from Indonesia. While SVLK / FLEGT licensing denotes complete compliance with the EUTR for European importers, a FLEGT licence may not in and of itself guarantee compliance with timber import regulations in other jurisdictions, such as the U.S. Lacey Act in the United States.

  • Much of the timber used in Indonesian-made wood products has been sourced domestically.
  • Indonesia has developed a mandatory system to verify the legality of timber production and trade called the SVLK.
  • Despite an operational SVLK, challenges remain with its full and effective functioning.
  • Government of Indonesia figures suggest enforcement action is growing rapidly but reportedly still lacks clout and consistency.
  • There are continued reports of illegal logging.
  • Imports have tended to come from relatively lower-risk sources, with some exceptions.

Read more by downloading the Indonesia Timber Legality Risk Dashboard here.

Latest Updates Click for latest news from Indonesia
November 15, 2024
Smallholder oil palm farmers in Indonesia call for no delay in EUDR implementation

The Oil Palm Farmers Union of Indonesia, made up of smallholder oil palm producers, also shared a statement statement calling for the EUDR to no longer be delayed and for implementation to move forward (statement is in Bahasa).

More...
November 11, 2024
Nestle, P&G investigate palm oil sourcing after green group's Indonesia deforestation report
Consumer brands including Nestle and Procter & Gamble said they conducted investigations after an environmental group said palm oil sourced from an illegally cleared wildlife reserve in Indonesia may have found its way into their supply chains.
Rainforests within the legally protected wildlife reserve had been cleared to make way for palm oil plantations during the last eight years, the U.S.-based Rainforest Action Network (RAN) said, citing satellite images that it says reveal deforestation in the area.
RAN said its investigation, conducted in September and October, had found fresh fruit bunches from the illegal plantations were sold to mills PT Global Sawit Semesta (GSS) and PT Aceh Trumon Anugerah Kita (ATAK), both of which supplied major brands including Procter & Gamble, Nestlé, Mondelez and PepsiCo, according to the RAN report.
More...
November 11, 2024
Deforestation spike in Indonesia’s ‘orangutan capital’ linked to firms financed by sustainability-linked loans

An investigation by Rainforest Action Network has identified new illegal forest clearing for palm oil in Indonesia’s protected Leuser ecosystem. The loss of habitat for endangered species such as the Sumatran orangutan has been connected to Singapore-headquartered firms with no-deforestation pledges that supply major consumer brands.

More...
November 4, 2024
Africa Leads Race to be EUDR-Ready

The Ivory Coast is steadily gaining on southeast Asian nations as a major rubber producer, buoyed by pending sustainability rules in Europe.

The West African country produced 1.55 million tonnes of natural rubber last year, according to the International Rubber Study Group. That is nearly double the 815,000 tonnes produced in 2019 and puts the Ivory Coast ahead of Vietnam in becoming the world’s third-largest producer, after Thailand and Indonesia.

 

Indonesia and Thailand currently produce about half the world’s natural rubber. But Indonesia, the world’s second-largest producer, saw output drop 20% from 2019 to 2.65 million tonnes last year. Unlike Ivory Coast, Indonesia is seeing a decline in the number of farmers producing natural rubber.

More...
October 25, 2024
A Decade of Progress on Palm Oil Deforestation at Risk in Indonesia

Over the past decade, Indonesia has achieved a remarkable reduction in deforestation for palm oil production. In 2018–2022, deforestation for palm oil was 32,406 hectares per year (the size of 60,664 American football fields) – only 18% of its peak a decade earlier. Importantly, deforestation has fallen during a period of continued expansion of palm oil production.

 

Our analysis of the latest data for Trase, a non-profit organization that specializes in research on commodity-driven deforestation, shows this achievement is at risk. Data for 2022 shows an 18% increase in deforestation linked to palm oil, though it remained lower than all previous years analyzed except 2021.

More...
View More Articles
October 24, 2024
Indonesia vs. European Union: Palm Oil and Biofuels Dispute at WTO Panels
More...
October 21, 2024
Biomass firm poised to clear Bornean rainforest for dubious ‘green’ energy

Indonesia’s strategy for increasing renewable energy production could see Indigenous communities lose huge swathes of their forests to biomass plantations. Mongabay visited the planned site of one such project on the island of Borneo, where three villages have signed over at least 5,000 hectares of their land to a biomass company. Much of this area, locals say, is covered in rainforest that would presumably be cleared for the project.

Despite its billing as sustainable, research has shown that burning woody biomass emits more climate change-causing CO2 than coal per unit of electricity produced. The company in Borneo, moreover, has said it plans to export the wood pellets to be produced on its plantation.

Villagers we spoke to complained of unfair dealing by the company, from inadequate compensation to outright land grabbing with no payment or consent.

More...
October 19, 2024
The Scandal of the Indonesian Leader’s Son and the Private Jet

This article looks at the activities of the Indonesia Corruption Eradication Commission as it relates to former President Joko Widodo and his family. This includes ties to Sinar Mas, one of Indonesia’s largest conglomerates. Sinar Mas has not been penalized by regulators even though its subsidiaries had been implicated in forest fires in Indonesia in 2019 — possibly due to close tikes between Mr Joko’s sons and children of Sinar Mas executives.

More...
October 3, 2024
Past failures can’t stop Indonesia from clearing forests, Indigenous lands for farms

The Indonesian government is embarking on yet another project to establish a massive area of farmland at the expense of forests and Indigenous lands, despite a long history of near-identical failures.

 

The latest megaproject calls for clearing 1 million hectares (2.5 million acres) in the district of Merauke in the eastern region of Papua for rice fields.

More...
October 3, 2024
Sink or Swim: Sluggish Plywood Demand Hits Indonesia Hard

At least one industry assiation is proposing that the government should open the door to exporting sawn timber products to make up for the slop demand for Indonesian plywood.

More...
September 24, 2024
Orangutan habitat in Indonesian Borneo faces imminent threat of destruction
  • Over 1,800 hectares of natural forest in the timber concession of Babugus Wahana Lestari in Central Kalimantan is facing immediate threat of destruction, Earthsight and Auriga Nusantara can reveal. Local residents say the company plans to clear the forest to plant fast-growing timber for use in bioenergy
  • Babugus Wahana Lestari had its timber legality certification suspended in October 2023, after auditors found it logging outside permitted areas
  • Earthsight/Auriga have identified two Indonesian companies which in 2023 purchased timber from the concession while also exporting wood products to the EU
  • The case underlines the critical importance of the EUDR, to ensure European consumers are not complicit in use of wood products produced illegally or on recently deforested land.
More...
September 24, 2024
Orangutan habitat in Indonesian Borneo faces imminent threat of destruction
  • Over 1,800 hectares of natural forest in the timber concession of Babugus Wahana Lestari in Central Kalimantan is facing immediate threat of destruction, Earthsight and Auriga Nusantara can reveal. Local residents say the company plans to clear the forest to plant fast-growing timber for use in bioenergy
  • Babugus Wahana Lestari had its timber legality certification suspended in October 2023, after auditors found it logging outside permitted areas
  • Earthsight/Auriga have identified two Indonesian companies which in 2023 purchased timber from the concession while also exporting wood products to the EU
  • The case underlines the critical importance of the EUDR, to ensure European consumers are not complicit in use of wood products produced illegally or on recently deforested land.
More...
September 22, 2024
Borneoland’s Illegal Workers – How Come No Action Against Hii Family?

This article alleges that Sarawak’s timber tycoon Hii family has been hiring illegal Indonesian workers to conduct logging operations in the internationally protected area of Ba Data Bila in the Baram region which the Sarawak Forestry Department has denied were taking place.

 

 

More...
August 8, 2024
Indonesia palm oil lobby pushes 1 million hectares of new Sulawesi plantations

A state-owned palm oil company and an industry association have begun early work to push a vast new plantation strategy in Sulawesi, one of Indonesia’s largest islands.

 

The proposal includes aspirations for production of a form of environmentally friendly fertilizer that the signatories to a document signed in May hope will enable producers to apply for climate finance incentives, despite the deforestation implied in the plan.

More...
August 8, 2024
Indonesia, EU reconcile forest data ahead of new rules on deforestation-free trade

The Indonesian government is working on improving and synchronizing its forest and supply chain data to comply with increasingly strict sustainability standards and requirements in markets where it exports to, including the European Union. Earlier this year, the Indonesian government discovered discrepancies between the forest map and data that it uses, and those used by the EU as a reference for the implementation of the European Union Deforestation Regulation (EUDR).

 

Another effort that the Indonesian government is undertaking to make it easier for its producers to prove that their products are deforestation-free is developing a supply chain traceability system.

The system will be in the form of an online dashboard, set for launch in September, which will collect and synchronize all data and maps related to various commodities, such as palm oil, coffee, cocoa and rubber, at all stages of the supply chain.

More...
July 12, 2024
Sumatra pulp & paper giants violate zero-deforestation pledge, activists allege

An investigation by an NGO coalition in Indonesia alleges that two pulp and paper giants — Asia Pulp & Paper (APP) and Asia Pacific Resources International Holdings Ltd. (APRIL) — have cleared natural forests and peatlands in violation of their zero-deforestation pledges.

 

The allegations center on a concession operated by PT Riau Andalan Pulp & Paper (RAPP) in Siak district of Riau province, a concession managed by an open market supplier to APRIL, PT Selaras Abadi Utama (SAU), in Pelalawan district of Riau province, and a block of land in Riau managed by a local cooperative that has a working agreement with an APP subsidiary, PT Arara Abadi (AA).

 

APRIL reiterated its commitment to sustainability and zero-deforestation and APP denied that any illegal timber had entered its supply chain.

More...
July 12, 2024
How Rebuilding Forests Helped Pangolins, Orangutans and People

Land restored by local residents in Borneo drew an array of wildlife after nonprofit groups first addressed the needs of nearby villagers.

 

Nearly 20 years ago, workers from Alam Sehat Lestari and Health in Harmony began asking villagers around the Gunung Palung National Park what they would need to protect the forest, where illegal logging had frequently occurred. This article summarizes what happened next…

More...
July 12, 2024
Let’s reduce poverty & deforestation via greater EUDR traceability requirements (commentary)

This Fern Op-Ed argues that the traceability requirement at the heart of the E.U.’s new deforestation law can also help lift smallholder farmers around the world out of poverty.

 

For example, in Côte d’Ivoire, farmers’ organisations say they support the Regulation because it could help push their government to complete the national cocoa traceability system — which they have been demanding for many years, as a means of ridding the local cocoa sector of corruption. This corruption blights the lives of smallholders, who are regularly forced to sell below the government-set price, with multiple local middlemen taking cuts along the way.

More...
July 4, 2024
A study finds Indonesia's deforested land is often left idle. But some see potential in that

Years after being felled, vast swathes of Indonesia’s old-growth forests are left sitting idle. And when the land is finally put to use, it’s most often for new palm oil plantations, according to a study published in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

 

But some experts — including the study’s authors — are hoping for a silver lining: The opportunity for Indonesia to expand its agricultural, palm, pulp and other commodities without having to cut down more trees, thus meeting increasing demand from companies and governments for products that didn’t depend on deforestation.

More...
July 1, 2024
The state of science journalism in Indonesia

A short briefing on the growing interest in science journalism and some of the techniques deployed, For example, In 2011, a leading environmental journalist  created a communication channel that empowered people living in remote areas of Borneo to send news reports via text messaging to Ruai TV, a station in the provincial capital. The initiative also trained citizen journalists on how to use mobile phones to document issues such as illegal logging and illicit land clearing in the region.

More...
June 30, 2024
Indonesian palm oil giant Astra Agro Lestari accused of illegally cultivating forest estates, land grabbing

Alleged environmental and human rights violations by Indonesia’s second-largest palm oil producer implicate multinationals including Unilever, Olam, BlackRock and Jardine Matheson. The allegations come amid Indonesia’s push for better governance over its palm oil industry, which is the world’s largest. AAL denies any wrongdoing.

 

The original Friends of the Earth report here: Indonesian palm oil linked to illegal deforestation, land rights violations (foe.org)

More...
June 19, 2024
Sugarcane megaproject poses latest threat to Papua’s forests, communities

A plan to establish 2 million hectares (nearly 5 million acres) of sugarcane plantations in Merauke district, in Indonesia’s Papua region, calls for deforesting an area six times the size of Jakarta, even as the government touts the green credentials of the project in the form of the bioethanol that it plans to produce from the sugar. Activists warn that the project risks becoming yet another land grab that deprives Indigenous Papuans of their customary lands and rights without fair compensation. They point out the  parallels to similarly ambitious projects that failed, the alleged involvement of palm oil firms, and government insistences that this richly forested region of Indonesia doesn’t have much forest left.

More...
June 13, 2024
Residents Urge Law Officials to Take Action Against Perpetrators of Illegal Logging in the Forests of Southwest Aceh

The Chairman of the Village Forest Management Institution (LPHD) in Alue Jeureujak, Babahrot District, Bustami, said that illegal logging activities within the protected forest area have been going on for a long time, but there has been no enforcement.

More...
June 5, 2024
Indonesia designs agricultural commodities digital tracker in sustainability push
Indonesia plans to set up a digital dashboard by August to track its agricultural commodities, its economics ministry said, as the world’s top palm oil exporter looks to monitor $6.5 billion worth of products that face a new EU anti-deforestation rule.
The dashboard aims to increase the transparency of the supply chain of agriculture commodities such as palm oil, coffee and rubber, and better promote sustainability standards in the country, the ministry said in a statement on Wednesday.
More...
May 25, 2024
Myanmar’s Teak Surge: Why Italy is EU’s Smuggling Hotspot

The Irrawaddy River is a flashpoint for conflict timber, with more than 100 tons—and sometimes up to 300 tons—of teak and other species leaving Myanmar ports every week.

The teak is then traded into Western Markets (including Italy, teak’s entry point into the EU) via China, India and Indonesia, with proceeds used to fuel both sides of the conflict.

Yesterday, Mynamar officials announced that more than 1,600 tons of teak (more than 250 tonnes a week) had been confiscated over the past six weeks, in a major escalation in the trade across borders. And that is just the timber, deemed “illegal” by the junta-controlled government – with the hidden trade in teak booming amongst the junta’s allies.

More...
May 9, 2024
America Relies on Vietnam (and China) for Plywood Imports have rocketed 45% over the last 12 months, with Vietnamese ply now responsible for more than 20% of all shipments to US ports.

Plywood imports from Vietnam have now tripled – with US cracking down on Chinese traders using Vietnamese ports to bypass trade regulations,

 

The vast majority of imports are made up of birch plywood (77% or 187,000 cubic metres), with Brazil (191,000 cubic metres), Indonesia (140,000 cubic metres), Chile (119,000 cubic metres) and Canada (114,000 cubic metres) responsible for the balance.

More...
May 1, 2024
Indonesia and Malaysia: Palm Oil Under Pressure from Substitutes and EU Deforestation Regulation

The palm oil industry, notably in Indonesia and Malaysia, the world’s two largest producers, faces challenges from claimed environmentally friendly substitutes. C16 Bioscience, a US-based company, has been developing palm oil substitutes since 2017 with Bill Gates, the founder of Microsoft, among its investors.

On its website, C16 promotes Palmless by emphasising palm oil’s environmental harm. It doubts the efficacy of the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO) certification, as certified palm oil is often mixed with non-certified palm oil, hindering source traceability despite RSPO criteria against primary forest clearance or biodiversity-rich areas.

Now, C16 is leveraging the EUDR to expand the utilisation of Palmless. The company recommends that downstream producers diversify their supply chains by using palm oil alternatives like Palmless, which falls outside the scope of the EUDR.

More...
April 13, 2024
Future of the Most Versatile Food Oil May Lie in Latin America

Bloomberg reports on the growth of palm oil production in Latin America where new, highly traceable supply chains are being established as traditional palm oil giants Malaysia and Indonesia have run out of land for further expansion without deforestation.

More...
April 10, 2024
Ghost roads and the destruction of Asia-Pacific tropical forests

All nations have some unmapped or unofficial roads, but the situation is especially bad in biodiversity-rich developing nations, where roads are proliferating at the fastest pace in human history.

 

When ghost roads appear, local deforestation soars—usually immediately after the roads are built. We found the density of roads was by far the most important predictor of forest loss, outstripping 38 other variables.

Also reported here: Scientists find vast numbers of illegal ‘ghost roads’ used to crack open pristine rainforest (phys.org)

More...
April 4, 2024
Tropical forest loss puts 2030 zero-deforestation target further out of reach

The overall rate of primary forest loss across the tropics remained stubbornly high in 2023, putting the world well off track from its net-zero deforestation target by 2030, according to a new report from the World Resources Institute.

 

The few bright spots were Brazil and Colombia, where changes in political leadership helped drive down deforestation rates in the Amazon.

 

Elsewhere, however, several countries hit record-high rates of forest loss, including the Democratic Republic of Congo, Bolivia and Laos, driven largely by agriculture, mining and fires.

More...
April 3, 2024
How to ensure due diligence policies actually tackle deforestation

New research using Trase data shows that supply chain divergence to meet different consumer requirements already is a reality. Brazil’s exporters, for example, sell soy to Denmark and Norway that is four-times less exposed to deforestation than soy sent to China or used domestically.

 

The researchers interviewed companies from the Brazilian soy sector and confirmed such segmentation is both predictable and standard practice. While physical segregation of soy grains can be challenging, it has not been difficult for certain traders and regions exposed to very different levels of deforestation to specialise in markets that demand higher or lower levels of sustainability.

More...
April 1, 2024
Indonesia and EUDR geolocation requirements

The ITTO MIS reports that the Government of Indonesia has stated that  geolocation information will be integrated into various forest product utilisation systems managed by KLHK, such as the Forest Utilisation Business Control Information System (SIPASHUT), the Forest Product Administration Information System (SIPUHH), the Raw Material Utilisation Plan Information System (SIRPBBPHH) and the Timber Legality Information System (SVLK).

In related news, the founder of the Indonesian Forestry Certification Cooperation (IFCC), is developing a draft document and scheme that exporters can use as a reference that enables exporters to obtain a geolocation after a certification audit.  The aim is to assist exporters adapt to the EUDR regulations.

More...
March 25, 2024
KLHK lauds verdict for 5 companies over illegal logging distribution

Ministry of Environment and Forestry (KLHK) praised the ruling of East Java’s Surabaya District Court that awarded imprisonment and imposed fines of billions of rupiah on five companies’ directors for illegal logging distribution from Papua.

More...
March 12, 2024
In landmark deforestation case, WTO finds EU discriminated against palm oil in setting biofuel rules

The international trade body backed the EU’s decision to impose rules against palm oil as a biofuel due to emission risks but said the bloc failed to properly implement them, validating complaints by trade partner Malaysia.

The report summarizes the use of biofuels in Indonesia and Malaysia as well.

More...
March 12, 2024
The Credit Chainsaw

This report by Global Witness shows how the 20 biggest banks in the EU have provided billions to companies linked to deforestation since 2016. This review shows that voluntary guidelines and individual commitments by financial institutions are unlikely to stop the financing of forest destruction.

More...
March 8, 2024
How Money Laundering Rules Could Be Used to Tackle Deforestation

Last November, French NGO Sherpa filed a complaint with the National Prosecutor’s Office against French banks BNP Paribas, Crédit Agricole, BPCE, and Axa. It called for a criminal investigation into money laundering and concealment, arguing that the banks’ financial support for Brazil’s biggest beef companies was contributing to illegal deforestation in the Amazon.

More...
March 5, 2024
Rainforest Action Network highlights continued deforestation in national parks linked to major brands

RAN’s investigators have once again documented illegal expansion into nationally protected areas in the Leuser Ecosystem in the district of Aceh Tamiang on the island of Sumatra.

 

RAN indicates no government or supply chain interventions taken during this period to stop the destruction even though the district government of Aceh Tamiang has public commitments to end deforestation and PepsiCo, Unilever and others claim that collaborative forest monitoring systems are being used to identify and respond to deforestation across the district.

More...
February 13, 2024
Palm oil deforestation makes comeback in Indonesia after decade-long slump

Deforestation for oil palm plantations has increased for the second year in a row in Indonesia, the world’s biggest producer of palm oil, bucking a decade-long decline in forest loss.

A third of the 2023 deforestation occurred on carbon-rich peatlands, raising the potential for massive greenhouse gas emissions as these areas are cleared and drained in preparation for planting.

Historically, deforestation for plantations in Indonesia was concentrated on the island of Sumatra, but the surge in the past two years has been mostly on the islands of Indonesian Borneo and Papua.

More...
February 2, 2024
Indonesia’s rubber industry faces strain from EU deforestation law

The EUDR’s geolocation requirement is equivalent to Indonesia’s plantation cultivation permit (STDB), which must be obtained through registration with the Agriculture Ministry’s Plantations Directorate General.

 

“We estimate that of the 3.2 million hectares of people’s plantation land, only 10,000 ha already have the STDB,” Erwin said, urging the government to facilitate the registration of smallholder farmers, who produce 90 per cent of Indonesia’s natural rubber. Plantations Director General Andi Nur Alam Syah said the ministry would push regional governments to expedite data collection, mapping, verification and issuance of STDB for rubber farmers by the end of the year, when the EUDR will begin to apply.

More...
January 29, 2024
Assessing tropical deforestation in Germany’s agricultural commodity supply chains

From 2016-2018, 94% of Germany’s directly imported deforestation risk was linked to just five key commodities: soy, coffee, palm oil, cocoa and cattle. More than 90% of this comes from nine countries, including Brazil Colombia, and Indonesia. Deforestation risk in Germany’s supply chains has varied over time, but has recently begun to emerge in particular hotspots, such as Colombia.

 

Deforestation risk can be concentrated in particular areas within hotspots: more than half of Brazilian soy deforestation risk comes from just three municipalities in the Matopiba region.

 

More...
December 29, 2023
Government to build special economic zone for wood industry

The government has planned to build a special economic zone (SEZ) for the wood industry to increase the wood production and competitiveness of Indonesian timber and furniture products. All regulations and facilities will be integrated in the wood industry SEZ, including the wood downstreaming industry.

More...
December 28, 2023
Shrinking civil space and persistent logging: 2023 in review in Southeast Asia

Mongabay presents a short summary of status of illegal logging and forest governance in SE Asia.

More...
December 27, 2023
https://news.mongabay.com/2023/12/a-decade-of-stopping-deforestation-how-the-palm-oil-industry-did-the-seemingly-impossible-commentary/

Wilmar International’s No Deforestation, No Peat, No Exploitation policy, announced ten years ago, marked a significant milestone in environmental conservation by prohibiting deforestation, peatland destruction, land-grabbing, and labor abuses in their global supply chain, impacting thousands of palm oil companies.

The policy, a result of global campaigning and intense negotiations, contributed to a dramatic reduction in deforestation for palm oil by over 90%, influencing other industries and contributing to the lowest deforestation levels in Indonesia, as well as progress in Malaysia, Papua New Guinea, and tropical Africa, argues Glenn Hurowitz, the Founder and CEO of Mighty Earth, who led the negotiation with Wilmar.

Hurowitz says this “success story” highlights the importance of private sector involvement, effective campaigning, diligent implementation, the necessity of continuous effort, and the insufficiency of data alone in driving change.

More...
November 28, 2023
Malaysia, Indonesia seek allies in EU deforestation row

Malaysia and Indonesia want to bring other Southeast Asian countries on their side amid ongoing disputes with the European Union over environmental and deforestation regulations that are set to take effect in late 2024, with the two nations worried about the regulations’ impact on the region’s agriculture exports. Both Southeast Asian states have independently initiated complaints against the EU to the World Trade Organization (WTO).

 

Indonesia and Malaysia, which together account for around 85% of global palm oil production, argue that the EU Deforestation-Free Regulation is discriminatory and unfairly punishes small-scale farmers who will struggle to cope with the bureaucratic demands set by Brussels.

More...
November 20, 2023
New investigation casts doubt on a Singapore-listed palm oil giant’s green claims

But an investigation by nonprofit newsroom The Gecko Project reveals how First Resources’ majority shareholders, the billionaire Fangiono family, have breached their company’s pledge of “sustainable” production by secretly controlling companies that environmental analysts found had cleared large areas of rainforest in Indonesia.

 

The investigation in collaboration with the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists also spotlights a loophole in the Singapore Exchange’s reporting rules that allows listed companies to publish so-called sustainability reports, without requiring that an independent firm audits the company’s green claims.

More...
November 15, 2023
Technology against deforestation: Cleaning up supply chains with satellites, maps, and data

With enforcement of a new deforestation law on the horizon, stakeholders along the food supply chain and working to ensure compliance. We look at the new tools and services being developed that promise enhanced traceability and due diligence.

More...
November 15, 2023
How customary laws help an Indonesian tribe preserve a forest

The news article highlights how a park in Indonesia  is a beneficiary of the Lindu community’s distinctive approach to forest conservation, which stems from customary law.

 

The state has a buy-in, and helps impose these customary laws, or rules.  Administration officials work with a customary council of elders and village representatives, called Totua Ngata, to ensure that rules are respected and enforced.

More...
November 13, 2023
Food industry calls for more time to implement EU deforestation rules

The food industry says it is running out of time to prepare for new EU rules to cut carbon emissions from the supply chains of several key commodities, accusing Brussels of issuing proposals that lack detail and will fail to stop deforestation.

More...
November 8, 2023
NGOs call for Forest Stewardship Council to cut ties with Canadian pulp and paper giant

Investigations by ICIJ partners and others have previously linked Paper Excellence to Asia Pulp & Paper, a Chinese-Indonesian forestry company accused of deforestation and human rights abuses.

More...
November 7, 2023
UK’s flagship environment law not yet able to have impact on deforestation, says NGO study

New Global Witness report indicates that the UK’s two-year old environmental legislation has not affected deforestation due to lack of follow-up by the government.

 

Also covered here: Beef, soy and palm oil products linked to deforestation still imported into UK | Deforestation | The Guardian

More...
October 22, 2023
China’s Belt & Road Grip on Global Timber Remains Strong for Now

The total forest area of BRI countries represents 30.5% of the global forest area, with total forest product trade between the countries growing from US $48 billion in 2013 to US $72 billion in 2021. Often described as “the World’s Factory”, China produced 71% of the world’s manufactured plywood in 2020, and whilst that number has dropped, Wood Central understands that Chinese companies are investing in Malaysian and Indonesian plywood manufacturing.

 

As the world’s largest consumption market, it swallowed 18% of global demand and 71% of Asian demand for forest products. It has the highest reliance on imports – with the share of imported wood at 55%, including sawn timber, logs, pulp and paper.

More...
October 18, 2023
High-resolution maps show that rubber causes substantial deforestation

A new report indicates that rubber-related forest loss has been substantially underestimated in policy, by the public and in recent reports. Direct remotely sensed observations show that deforestation for rubber is at least twofold to threefold higher than suggested by figures now widely used for setting policy

More...
September 30, 2023
Why the Dutch Have a €10B Problem With EU Deforestation Laws

The Netherlands is Europe’s largest importer of deforestation-linked products with a surge in wood and wood-based products from China and Brazil. The Dutch are the largest importer of soy, palm oil and cocoa and, most significantly, the region’s second-largest importer of wood products. Of the total imports that transition through the port, 28% are re-exported abroad, 33% are traded into European markets after processing, and 39% remain in the country for direct consumption or secondary processing.

 

As a result of its place in the global trade, the government of Netherlands has been urged by some producer countries to push back on the EUDR.

More...
September 13, 2023
New Global Witness report: Standing firm The Land and Environmental Defenders on the frontlines of the climate crisis

For the past 11 years, Global Witness has documented and denounced waves of threats, violence and killings of land and environmental defenders across the world, and 2022 marks the beginning of our second decade documenting lethal attacks. The world has changed dramatically since we started documenting these in 2012. But one thing that has not changed is the relentlessness of the killings.

Last year, at least 177 defenders lost their lives for protecting our planet, bringing the total number of killings to 1,910 since 2012. At least 1,390 of these killings took place between the adoption of the Paris Agreement on 12 December 2015 and 31 December 2022.

More...
September 1, 2023
Palm oil giants Indonesia, Malaysia start talks with EU over deforestation rule

Negotiations have begun between the world’s top two palm oil producers and the EU to address sticking points in a deforestation law that would make it harder for the commodity to enter European markets.

 

Indonesia and Malaysia account for 85% of global palm oil exports, and would be heavily impacted by the EU Deforestation-Free Regulation (EUDR), which prohibits imports into the EU of commodities sourced by clearing forests.

 

At the first joint meeting of an EU-Indonesia-Malaysia task force, delegates discussed risk designations for producer countries as well as the role of certification schemes like the RSPO to help meet EUDR requirements.

 

Indonesian officials say their main issue with the EUDR is that it discriminates against small farmers, who manage 41% of the total plantation area in the country and would have difficulty complying with the new regulation’s requirements.

More...
August 9, 2023
Palm oil farmers in Indonesia have established a new foundation to help farmers around the country in protecting forests and selling their sustainable products to the global market. The foundation was established after the Indonesian palm oil farmers union, SPKS, carried out a pilot project in six villages in western Borneo. The pilot project proved that smallholders could cultivate palm oil without clearing forests by implementing the high carbon stock (HCS) approach, but they needed incentives and benefits. This is where the new foundation, called the Farmers For Forest Protection Foundation (4F), comes in by providing farmers with both financial and non-financial support, like training.

Palm oil farmers in Indonesia have established a new foundation to help farmers around the country in protecting forests and selling their sustainable products to the global market.

 

 

 

More...
June 5, 2023
EU policies to accelerate need for adoption of Indonesia’s sustainability focus This article was published in thejakartapost.com with the title "EU policies to accelerate need for adoption of Indonesia’s sustainability focus". Click to read: https://www.thejakartapost.com/opinion/2023/06/05/eu-policies-to-accelerate-need-for-adoption-of-indonesias-sustainability-focus.html. Download The Jakarta Post app for easier and faster news access: Android: http://bit.ly/tjp-android iOS: http://bit.ly/tjp-ios

This opinion piece by HSBC Indonesia President Director summarizes not just the recent EUDR, but also some potential opportunities .

 

The EU-Indonesia Comprehensive Economic Partnership (CEPA), is currently being discussed and hopefully will be signed this year. It has the potential to transform what looks like a potential export blocker into an opportunity to strengthen trade and disclosure between the two parties. Also, Indonesia’s Green Taxonomy 1.0 launched by the Financial Services Authority (OJK) in 2022 is one of the first policy attempts to encourage the private sector to prioritize green investments and further incentivize businesses to comply with environment, social and governance (ESG)-related regulations that can otherwise become barriers to access sustainable finance. The taxonomy can eventually help the commodities sector to access sustainable financing to help their companies integrate ESG practices and standards into their supply chain, which allows them to access EU market.

More...
June 3, 2023
Is teak furniture immoral? Why we no longer recommend our former favorite

While this article is a basic summary of recent reports on the trade of Myanmar teak and sanctions, it also lists a few countries where some FSC-certified or “ethical teak” can be found (Indonesia, Vietnam, Laos, Costa Rica, Brazil, Columbia)

More...
June 2, 2023
Huge increase in transnational crime and synthetic drugs in SE Asia requires cross-border cooperation

Thailand, Laos and Myanmar are at the frontlines of illicit trade in Asia dominated by transnational organized crime syndicates.

 

The trafficking in illegal narcotics, precursor chemicals, timber and wildlife, people and illicit goods across Southeast Asia is being tackled thanks to the support of the specialized UN agency focusing on drugs and crime.

More...
May 12, 2023
MALAYSIAN ENVIRONMENTAL AUDITING SCHEME UNDER SCRUTINY FOR IGNORING LABOR VIOLATIONS

The revelations mirror Deforestation Inc. findings from around the world, which showed how auditing firms hired as environmental verifiers often ignore or fail to identify serious transgressions by their clients.

 

Audit firms in Finland, Indonesia, Chile, India, and Germany are also mentioned.

More...
May 10, 2023
How can coffee professionals use technology to comply with new EU deforestation regulations?

This article provides background on the EUDR and potential for technology to monitor deforestation rates and help farmers provide information about their farming practices. A pilot in Indonesia is described, as well as potential future projects in Bolivia, Colombia and Honduras.

More...
May 9, 2023
Indonesia's illicit oil palm farms granted amnesty despite largescale deforestation

The hugely controversial law, deemed unconstitutional in a court challenge yet somehow still in force, did away with criminal punishment for illegal plantations and their operators, and instead allowed them to be legalised by paying fines and applying for rezoning of the land to non-forest area.

The amnesty scheme has drawn criticism from activists and some lawmakers. Critics say the scheme whitewashes the crimes of setting up plantations inside areas zoned as forest, where deforestation, wildfires and land conflicts are rife.

And while the Ministry of Environment and Forestry says the amnesty program is also geared toward small farmers who manage illegal smallholdings, most of the plantations that have benefitted to date are run by companies, according to Uli Arta Siagian, forest and plantation campaign manager at environmental NGO Walhi.

More...
May 4, 2023
Barclays quietly introduces tougher deforestation rules

Barclays has published new supply chain sustainability requirements for clients in forest-risk commodity sectors including beef and palm oil.

Barclay’s has added a new Forestry and Agricultural Commodities statement to its website this week. The statement stipulates that Barclays has “no appetite” to support companies directly involved in illegal forest clearance.

 

From the beginning of July,  beef producers will not be able to undertake work in areas of the Amazon rainforest cleared or converted after 2008.

 

Those producing beef in South America will also need to prove that they gave deforestation-free supply chains by 2025. By the end of 2025, these firms will need to update their policy commitments on deforestation and human rights, and to monitor and report on deforestation-free product volumes.

More...
May 3, 2023
Barclays toughens deforestation rules for beef sector clients

Barclays (BARC.L) has told beef sector clients they must prevent deforestation in their South American supply chains, in a policy document seen by Reuters that toughens the bank’s stance but stops short of campaigners’ demands.

More...
April 28, 2023
Indonesia's Ministry of National Development Planning develops Sustainable Jurisdiction Indicators

The Sustainable Jurisdictions Indicators measure the commitment of a commodity-producing region that is sustainable and inclusive. Twenty-three indicators build on Indonesia’s legal framework as well as various international commitments, especially the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

These indicators are expected to provide an enabling environment for accelerating the fulfilment of various certification schemes such as the Indonesian Sustainable Palm Oil (ISPO) and the Roundtable on Sustainable Palm Oil (RSPO).

 

The Indicators will be displayed on a platform that allows various parties to view and picture the situation, committments and performance of the regions nationally.

More...
April 15, 2023
Indonesian plywood producers consider IFCC-PEFC certification

Indonesian plywood producers are considering the IFCCPEFC certification scheme in order to strengthen penetration into the export market as well as to support sustainable forest management.

 

See: https://forestinsights.id/2023/03/24/produsen-kayu-lapislirik-sertifikasi-ifcc-pefc-akreditasi-kan-jadi-satu-alasan/

More...
April 15, 2023
Indonesia's SLVK re-branded

The European Union’s decision to impose new rules regulating the timber trade has pushed Indonesia to act. On 1 March 2023 the Ministry of Environment and Forestry (KLHK) finalised a ‘new’ SVLK. The SVLK has changed to the ‘Legality and Sustainability Verification System’ with the same abbreviation, SVLK. This new regulation deals with the legality of timber sources and identifies the sources that are sustainably managed.

 

The Director General of Sustainable Forest Management in the KLHK, Agus Justianto, when speaking at a seminar held by the Indonesian Timber Panel Association (Apkindo), said the previous SVLK also had sustainability aspects in its criteria and indicators. With the word sustainability (for the new SVLK), now emphasises legality and sustainability, he said. According to Agus, the SVLK has evolved to include, for example, a longer validity period for certificates for cultivated wood. There are also financing facilities for certification for micro, small and medium enterprises. He added that the government’s quick action in rebranding the SVLK should be appreciated as it deals with market requirements as the EU wood product market is large and Indonesia must act to capture a greater market share. See: https://agroindonesia.co.id/svlk-baru-perkuat-kelestarian/

More...
March 31, 2023
Indonesia's Minister of Industry discusses domestic and non-traditional export markets for furniture

Indonesia’s furniture and crafts exports reached US$2.8 billion in 2022 and the government hopes that exports will increase to US$5 billion in 2024.

 

The Ministry of Industry has two strategies to improve profitability in the sector. First, greater emphasis on the domestic market as the size of this market, especially the middle class segment, continues to expand. The second is exports to non-traditional markets for example India and the Middle East where growth in the property sector is relatively stable.

 

The Indonesian Furniture and Craft Association (HIMKI) chairman, Abdul Sobur, revealed that exports to the EU declined in 2022 so HIMKI members are now investigating the Middle East markets such as Qatar, Israel and the United Arab Emirates.

 

 

 

More...
March 31, 2023
ITTO reports that Indonesia ready to challenge EUDR

The Director General of Sustainable Forest Management, Ministry of Environment and Forestry (KLHK), Agus Justianto, is reported as saying Indonesia is ready to challenge the European Union (EU) at the World Trade Organisation (WTO) regarding the enactment of the deforestation-free law which, Indonesia considers, will become a trade barrier for wood products.

More...
March 29, 2023
Reporters share behind-the-scenes stories from Deforestation Inc.

In March 2023, the ICIJ and 39 media partners published Deforestation Inc., a global investigation that exposed flaws in environmental auditing and certification programs intended to promote responsible forestry and combat illegal logging and deforestation. For this month’s episode of the Meet the Investigators podcast, we recorded a special live panel featuring reporters who had visited ravaged forests, tracked shipments of timber around the world, and trawled through corporate documents, leaked files and more to uncover the many ways in which a system designed to protect the environment, consumers and investors is failing with concerning frequency.

 

The situation in Myanmar, Romania, Indonesia, Germany is featured, as well as with the extent and nature of problems with falsified documents and  certification systems more broadly.

More...
March 23, 2023
Palm oil deforestation hits record high in Sumatra’s ‘orangutan capital’

The forest loss was driven by clearing for oil palm plantations by well-connected local elites, rather than smallholders, according to advocacy group Rainforest Action Network (RAN).

RAN’s investigation found that palm oil from these illegal plantations had wound up in the global supply chains of major brands like Procter & Gamble, Nestlé, PepsiCo and Unilever, among others.

More...
March 22, 2023
CANADIAN LAWMAKERS CALL FOR PROBE INTO PULP AND PAPER GIANT FOLLOWING DEFORESTATION INC. REVELATIONS

The International Consortium of Investigative Journalistts and partners uncovered hidden links between Canada’s Paper Excellence and troubled Indonesian company Asia Pulp & Paper.

 

Lawmakers in Canada are calling for an investigation into one of North America’s largest pulp and paper manufacturers, following revelations in Deforestation Inc., a cross-border investigation led by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists.

The parliamentarians said they are seeking answers into who is behind Paper Excellence, a company headquartered in British Columbia, after journalists revealed extensive links between the company and entities in Indonesia and China.

More...
March 21, 2023
Indonesian campaigns getting money from illegal logging, mining, watchdog says

As Indonesia gears up for legislative and presidential elections in less than a year, authorities have warned of the pattern of dirty money from illegal logging, mining and fishing flowing into past campaigns.

 

As Indonesia gears up for legislative and presidential elections in less than a year, authorities have warned of the pattern of dirty money from illegal logging, mining and fishing flowing into past campaigns.

More...
February 9, 2023
Indonesia, Malaysia to send palm oil envoys to EU over deforestation law

JAKARTA, Feb 9 (Reuters) – Indonesia and Malaysia, the world’s biggest palm oil producers, plan to send envoys to the European Union to discuss the impact of the bloc’s new deforestation law on their palm oil sectors, ministers from the Southeast Asian countries said on Thursday.

More...
November 18, 2022
Brazil, Indonesia, And The D.R.C. Work to Stop Deforestation

Brazil, Indonesia, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo have the largest area of rainforests in the world. On November 14th, at the G20 summit in Bali, the three countries agreed to create the Rainforest Protection Pact, which will work to stop deforestation and regrow forests. The countries plan to ask for funding to help with monitoring and preventing deforestation, although it is uncertain who will provide this funding.

More...
July 15, 2022
Plantations threaten Indonesia’s orangutans, but they’re not oil palm
  • A significant portion of orangutan habitat in Indonesia lies within corporate concessions, but industrial tree companies, like pulp and paper, don’t have strong enough safeguards and commitment to protect the critically endangered apes, a new report says.
  • According to the report by Aidenvironment, there are 6.22 million hectares (15.37 million acres) of orangutan habitat within corporate oil palm, logging, and industrial tree concessions.
  • Of the three types of concessions, industrial tree companies are the “key stakeholder” as they operate with much less transparency and scrutiny than the palm oil sector, Aidenvironment says.
More...
June 30, 2022
A conservation failure in Sumatra serves a cautionary tale for PES schemes
  • A World Bank-funded conservation project in Indonesia led to higher rates of deforestation after the project ended, a new study shows, serving as a cautionary tale about the risks of failing to sustain such initiatives over a long enough time period.
  • The payment for ecosystem services project was supposed to reward villages for halting deforestation and taking up sustainable livelihoods from 1996-2001.
  • In the years after the project ended, however, participating villages that had received the payments lost up to 26% more forest cover from 2000-2016 than non-participating villages, the study shows.
More...
May 24, 2022
Timber millions eyed in rainforest felling

A court filing reveals lucrative timber exports were a strong focus of forest-clearing by a part-Kiwi-owned firm operating in an area with substantial tropical rainforest in West Papua

Documents tabled in a New Zealand court case show how a Kiwi developer and a company which has cut down Papuan rainforest intend to make around $110 million from the timber to make floors and decks – in stark contrast to statements made in a recent Newsroom investigation.

Newsroom has secured the documentary evidence that lays out in detail how an Indonesian company linked to a New Zealand property developer intends to make close to A$100 million from clearing trees in an area of primary rainforest in Papua.

More...
May 20, 2022
Indonesia to reimpose local palm oil sales rule as it ends export ban

 Indonesia will reimpose a domestic sales requirement on palm oil, the government said on Friday, a day after the world’s biggest producer of the key edible oil reversed a ban on its export.

President Joko Widodo’s government has made several reversals on palm oil policy since November. The late-April export ban, an attempt to control high domestic cooking oil prices, shocked global edible oil markets and angered farmers as their product prices fell.

More...
April 27, 2022
Indonesia stuns markets as it widens ban to include CPO, refined palm oil

JAKARTA, April 27 (Reuters) – Indonesia widened the scope of its export ban on raw materials for cooking oil to include crude and refined palm oil, its chief economic minister said on Wednesday, leaving markets in shock over the latest policy reversal.

The announcement flipped the minister’s statement a day earlier, in which he had said the export ban would only cover refined, bleached, and deodorized palm olein.

More...
April 22, 2022
Indonesia slaps ban on palm oil exports

JAKARTA — Indonesia, the world’s largest producer of palm oil, on Friday announced an export ban of the commodity amid a continuing cooking oil crisis in the country.

Indonesian President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo said the ban on shipments of “raw materials for cooking oil and cooking oil” will take effect next Thursday for an indefinite period.

More...
March 28, 2022
FSC-certified Moorim Paper linked to massive forest clearing in Indonesia’s Papua

A subsidiary of South Korean paper company Moorim has cleared natural forests a tenth the size of Seoul in Indonesia’s Papua region over the past six years, a new report alleges. The report, published by various NGOs, alleges that the cleared areas consisted of primary forests serving as a habitat for threatened species and a source of livelihood for Indigenous Papuans.

More...
March 18, 2022
Probe finds palm oil firm illegally clearing forest in Sumatra wildlife haven

An investigation by the Rainforest Action Network (RAN) indicates that a palm oil company in Sumatra has been clearing forests illegally since at least 2016. The extent of the clearing by PT Nia Yulided Bersaudara (NYB), nearly two and a half times the size of New York City’s Central Park, makes it the top deforester among companies that have an oil palm concession in Sumatra’s Leuser Ecosystem.

More...
March 9, 2022
Meranti Islands Police arrest two illegal loggers

The water patrol police of Meranti Islands, Riau Province, arrested two illegal loggers found transporting 13 cubic meters of wood using a boat in the waters near Dedap Village, Tasik Putripuyu Sub-district, on Monday night.

More...
December 10, 2021
Illegal mangrove logging surges in Indonesia’s Batam amid economic hardship

Police in Indonesia’s Riau Islands have reported a 280% increase in seizures of mangrove wood from would-be smugglers this year.

Police said much of the wood was cut from the main island of Batam, and destined for nearby Singapore and Malaysia.

Indonesia is targeting the rehabilitation of 630,000 hectares (1.55 million acres) of mangrove forests across the country by 2024.

More...
September 30, 2021
EXPLAINER: Indonesia's forests in danger as ban on new palm oil plantations expires

Indonesia, the world’s biggest palm oil grower, lets a three-year moratorium on new plantations lapse but says it won’t give new permits. Will the move weaken forest protection?

More...
September 29, 2021
Monitoring reveals Indonesia’s ‘legal timber’ scheme riddled with violations

A monitoring exercise by Indigenous peoples and local communities of Indonesia’s “certified legal” timber industry has found myriad violations.

The group reported, among other findings, logging companies cutting down trees outside their concessions, woodworking shops manipulating delivery records to obscure the origin of the wood, and exporters selling forged export eligibility certificates.

More...
INDONESIA’S DISPUTED DEFORESTATION DATA
More...
Publications Click for publications related to Indonesia
Indonesia is the first, and currently, only, country in the world with an operational Forest Law Enforcement Governance and Trade (FLEGT) licensing scheme. This means that the Government of Indonesia has made significant efforts to develop a mandatory national system to track and verify legality and control illegal timber, called the Sistem Verifikasi Legalitas Kayu […]
While subsistence agriculture and logging still contribute to deforestation, commercial-scale agricultural expansion is now recognized as by far the single largest driver of deforestation worldwide and thus also of greenhouse gas emissions from land-use change. Several initiatives have quantified how much and where deforestation is driven by commercial agriculture, and even how much of this […]
Key Resources
Click here for a collection of Forest Trends publications related to IDAT Risk, including the full set of Timber Legality Risk Country Dashboards.
Methodology
Click here to download the Methodology which includes information on data sources, the methodology used to create risk indicators, and a glossary of key terms.
Data Tools

Click here to access the Global Illegal Logging and Associated Trade (ILAT) Risk assessment tool and to download the Forest Trends User Guide describing the functionality of the ILAT Risk Data Tool.

Click here to access the Cattle Data Tool.

Export Restrictions
Click here to download a database of forest policy export restrictions.