19/12/2005
- Washington, DC – One year after the Southeast Asian tsunami,
reconstruction is finally under way. But some of the hardest
hit areas risk sowing the seeds of future disasters unless
donor countries include sustainably sourced building materials
in their long-term aid packages, according to experts from
WWF. In Indonesia’s Aceh province,
for instance, officials estimate that at least 860,000
cubic metres of sawn timber will be needed for the construction
of 200,000 homes over the next five years. With Indonesia’s
forests already being logged three times faster than they
can regenerate, only a small fraction of this additional
demand can be met locally without resorting to illegal
logging that would decimate Sumatra’s biologically outstanding
rain forests, home to Sumatran tigers, orang-utans, and
other threatened species.
“Our hopes of building back better
really depend now on bridging this gap with imported timber,”
said Carter Roberts, president and CEO of WWF-US.
“Without responsibly sourced timber
from the outside, the rain forests of Sumatra will face
almost certain destruction from illegal logging. Meeting
human needs must be the first priority, but the destruction
of the rain forests would be a tragedy for both people
and conservation.”
WWF is partnering in the United States
with the American Forest & Paper Association (AF&PA)
and Conservation International (CI) to send responsibly-sourced
timber to Aceh. Two pilot shipments have already been
sent, with contributions from the Boise Cascade, Potlatch,
and Louisiana Pacific timber companies. Other countries
in WWF’s global conservation network also are contributing
to the effort, which represents one of the first practical
applications of the Green Reconstruction Guidelines developed
by WWF and endorsed by Indonesian reconstruction authorities.
Developed for Aceh, but applicable
to other tsunami-hit areas and countries, the guidelines
provide a blueprint for an integrated reconstruction plan
combining the use of responsibly-sourced building materials
with the creation of sustainably managed fishery, agriculture,
and aquaculture industries.
Poor planning in the past has been
responsible for a cascade of “mini-tsunamis” — flash floods
and mudslides down deforested slopes that have claimed
hundreds of lives and left thousands homeless in Aceh
over the past several years. If reconstruction now follows
the same unguided path, it could end up doing as much
or more long-term environmental damage than the tsunami
itself did.
“Really building back better means
enhancing the prospects for regional prosperity and security,
both of which depend on a healthy environment, not one
that has been further degraded by poor planning, however
well-intentioned," said Ralph Ashton, WWF’s Global
Tsunami Response Coordinator. "We need long-term
solutions, not quick fixes.”
In the year since the tsunami struck,
WWF has been working to assess the environmental damage,
rehabilitate natural coastal defenses such as coral reefs
and mangroves, and provide environmental advice to NGOs,
government agencies and former President Clinton’s UN
tsunami recovery office. WWF is also developing a plan
to introduce state-of-the-art aquaculture techniques to
shrimp farms in India, Indonesia, Sri Lanka, and Thailand.
WWF has forged close working field
relationships with groups such as Catholic Relief Services
and World Vision and in the coming months will be partnering
with the American Red Cross as environmental advisor for
its multi-million dollar tsunami reconstruction effort.
“We come at this from an environmental
perspective, but clearly it’s about more than that,” said
Roberts. “Helping the people of Southeast Asia to rebuild
their shattered lives and establish sustainable livelihoods
goes hand-in-glove with our conservation goals. It’s about
giving people the incentive to work for conservation by
getting conservation to work for them.” |