Paper company Cottonsoft has welcomed the news that Asia Pulp & Paper Group (APP) has committed to retire around 7,000 hectares of commercial plantation areas to protect threatened carbon-rich peatlands.

The companies say this marks the first time that a company has retired plantations on tropical peatland for conservation purposes. Kim Calvert, country manager for Cottonsoft, says, “APP’s commitment to protect threatened carbon-rich peatlands can only be good news for the paper industry and the environment. With climate change at the top of the agenda for both business and government, especially with COP21 this year and the UN Climate Summit last year, we welcome APP’s commitment to reduce carbon emissions through best practice management of peatland.

“Sustainable products are of utmost importance to Cottonsoft and our consumers. It is great to see our affiliate leading the way and developing best practices to manage forests. This will go some way in making our entire industry more sustainable, while future proofing the company as it continues to build on the momentum of the FCP.

Kim Calvert, country manager for Cottonsoft

Kim Calvert, country manager for Cottonsoft

Peatland development in Indonesia represents a large source of greenhouse gas emissions. Retiring these plantation areas will help support the Indonesian government’s target of a 26 per cent reduction in emissions by 2020.

Aida Greenbury, managing director sustainability at APP says, “APP’s decision to retire these areas of commercial plantation is an important milestone in the delivery of our forest conservation policy and we believe it is an unprecedented commitment. The retirement of active plantations is not an easy decision for any business to take, but we believe that taking urgent steps to protect remaining areas of peatland forest, as well as reducing and avoiding climate emissions from peatlands, must be a priority. While there is still a long way to go, and we have much to learn, this announcement today represents a major breakthrough.

“However, the reality of protecting peat landscapes is that no one company like APP can do it alone. APP’s goal of supporting the conservation of forest and peat landscapes needs to be a shared objective, and one supported by meaningful actions from both the Government and other plantation companies. This should include addressing the systemic barriers to forest and peatland protection, supporting forest restoration and ensuring development opportunities for communities.”

The land marked for retirement spreads across five individual Acacia plantation areas in Riau and South Sumatra which have been identified as requiring immediate rehabilitation following recommendations from the applied research institute Deltares. In line with APP’s forest conservation policy, a free and prior informed consent process will be conducted for the five areas, before any retirement proceeds.

APP says its initiative forms part of its commitment to establish a science-based landscape approach for best practice peatland management that can be used by the Indonesian government and plantation companies. It builds on the conservation pledges in the company’s forest conservation policy, which placed an immediate moratorium on all natural forests and new peatland development in February 2013.

As part of this approach, Deltares is working with APP to carry out the largest mapping exercise ever carried out on tropical peatland areas using remote sensing technology, deployed from aircraft, allowing Deltares to map around one quarter of all Indonesian peatland where APP’s suppliers are located. The area totals 4.5 million hectares and it will finalise the maps in 2016.

APP says the mapping will provide unprecedented insight into the hydrology and environmental conditions of a number of critically important peat landscapes. Analysis of the data will enable Deltares to provide further recommendations on how APP can minimise the impact of drainage in peat landscapes, making a significant contribution not only to reducing forest loss but also to reducing greenhouse gas emissions that lead to climate change.

Dr Aljosja Hooijer, programme leader at Deltares, says, “APP has an opportunity to support peatland forest conservation and emission reduction. The progress announced today is a first step in a process towards the development of a new model to define best management practices in peatlands. The pioneering approach to collecting data has allowed the technology to be deployed at an unprecedented scale economically, and will advance the science of peat and peat management not only in Indonesia, but also globally.”

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *