Minimizing pressure on forests for cleaner, cheaper water (12 Oct 04)
Minimizing pressure on forests for cleaner, cheaper water
The Jakarta Post,
4 Oct 04
[Opinion and Editorial]
By Fitrian Ardiansyah and Israr A

Jakarta

During the past two months, many areas throughout the country have faced
the ever-worsening seasonal water crisis. Drought has brought misery to
many and clean water is still a luxury for some people.

In big cities, people have had difficulty obtaining adequate supplies of
fresh water. Many farmers could not harvest their crops because they could
not irrigate them sufficiently. Cities in Sumatra have also experienced
electricity shortages due to lack of water for hydro-power plants, while
some areas in Kalimantan have become isolated because decreasing river
levels affect river transportation. Meanwhile, people throughout the
archipelago suffer from flooding and landslides every rainy season.

However, while many continue to suffer from water shortages, a
collaborative action -- between NGO activists in Lombok Island, the local
water enterprise (PDAM) of Menang and the West Lombok regency and Mataram
municipality administrations shows there is a solution to this resource
problem.
After a survey that found the island's water users were willing to protect
water sources, these stakeholders have been designing schemes to link water
users with Mount Rinjani landscape conservation.

With the support of local people, government officials and activists the
protection of catchment areas could eventually provide eight important
water sources for the urban areas on the island. These areas were
originally only protected by forestry officials.

This effort in Lombok to implement a "payment for environmental services"
is similar to what happened in Melbourne, a good example of how to provide
sustainable urban water.

Well-known as "Smellbourne" in the 18th century due to its poor water
quality, Melbourne officials ensured the protection and restoration of the
city's mountainous forest in the north and east. To date, the city obtains
90 percent of its drinking water supply from these areas, with the highest
quality water of any Australian city.

It has proven that implementing forest catchment area management is cheaper
than building a water treatment plant: Saving upper-catchment forests is
the best way to have cheap and clean water.

Last year, the World Bank and World Wildlife Fund released a report
entitled Running Pure showing one-third of 105 big cities, including New
York, Tokyo, Barcelona and Melbourne, obtained much of their water through
protected forests. It explained that preserving forests -- which reduce
landslides, erosion and sediment, improve water purity, and store water --
is a cost-effective way of providing clean drinking water.

David Cassells, a World Bank environmental specialist, said protecting
forest water catchment areas was no longer a luxury but a necessity. The
costs of providing clean and safe drinking water to urban areas, said
Cassels, would increase dramatically if forests disappeared.

However, managing these forests should not only be the responsibilities of
forest-dependent people, he said.

At the moment, the water supply imbalance in Indonesia has caused problems
and hardship.

Although it has 10 percent of the world's remaining tropical forests, the
annual deforestation rate -- through destructive logging and forest
conversion to pulp wood, agriculture (oil palm and other commodities),
mining, fires, human settlements and other infrastructure -- reaching up to
3.8 million hectares annually, has left Indonesia ever-fewer natural
resources and caused significant environmental damage, including the loss
of forest functions to regulate water.

The degradation results in loss of high conservation values (including
biodiversity), soil erosion, water pollution, increasingly dramatic
fluctuations between water shortages and flooding, siltation, health
problems, reduced potential for tourism and loss of income and employment,
particularly for forest-dependent people.

Looking at the criteria from the Ministry of Forestry and the Ministry of
Settlements and Regional Infrastructure, a growing number of catchment
areas can now be considered as critical, including Asahan (North Sumatra),
Cisadane and Ciliwung (Banten/West Java/Jakarta).

This degradation is likely to inflate the numbers of people who will lack
access to clean water for drinking and other domestic use. At the moment,
about 77 million Indonesian people (about one-third of the population) do
not have access to clean water and only depend on self-provisioning systems
(i.e. 50 percent of urban households and most rural households are served
by wells or small-water supply systems).

With dramatic disturbance to water supply and quality, people throughout
the archipelago may have to continue living in poverty while suffering from
limited availability of water -- which many countries consider a basic
human right.

The government needs to develop good and participative spatial planning
taking into account landscape and ecosystem integration, and making sure
the planning is enforced. The restoration scheme of the catchment areas
needs to link end water users -- including industries and PLN/electricity
companies.

The private sectors, including logging, plantation, mining, real estate
companies, situated in the catchment areas should actively participate in
catchment management by implementing better practices covering protecting,
maintaining and rehabilitating high conservation-value forests within their
concessions and put efforts to ensure their protection and maintenance.

Meanwhile, the awareness about the interconnection between cities and
catchment areas needs to be increased in Indonesia, especially in local
governments that are now -- in the era of decentralization -- seemingly
thinking that one can exist without the other.

It's time for water users to start actively conserving the forests. If a
local initiative in Lombok becomes a success story of how water catchment
areas can increase the supply of fresh water, will cities like Jakarta and
others follow?

Fitrian Ardiansyah is a program coordinator for World Wide Fund For Nature
(WWF) Indonesia, while Israr A. is a staff at Indonesia Forest and Media
Campaign (INFORM).

Reproduced with thanks.
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