Land in limbo: Nearly one third of Indonesia’s cleared old-growth forests left idle

Author:

Parker Diana1,Tosiani Anna2ORCID,Yazid Muhammad2,Sari Inggit L.3ORCID,Kartika Tatik3ORCID,Kustiyo 3,Firmansyah Rizky4ORCID,Said Zuraidah45,Wijaya Arief4ORCID,Potapov Peter1ORCID,Tyukavina Alexandra1,Stehman Stephen V.6ORCID,Zalles Viviana1,Pickens Amy1,Pickering Jeffrey1ORCID,Turubanova Svetlana1ORCID,Hansen Matthew C.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Geographical Sciences, University of Maryland, College Park, MD 20742

2. Ministry of Environment and Forestry of Indonesia, Jakarta 10270, Indonesia

3. National Research and Innovation Agency of Indonesia, Jakarta 10340, Indonesia

4. World Resources Institute of Indonesia, Jakarta 12170, Indonesia

5. United Nations Development Programme Indonesia, Jakarta 10250, Indonesia

6. Department of Sustainable Resources Management, College of Environmental Science and Forestry, State University of New York, Syracuse, NY 13210

Abstract

Indonesia has experienced rapid primary forest loss, second only to Brazil in modern history. We examined the fates of Indonesian deforested areas, immediately after clearing and over time, to quantify deforestation drivers in Indonesia. Using time-series satellite data, we tracked degradation and clearing events in intact and degraded natural forests from 1991 to 2020, as well as land use trajectories after forest loss. While an estimated 7.8 Mha (SE = 0.4) of forest cleared during this period had been planted with oil palms by 2020, another 8.8 Mha (SE = 0.4) remained unused. Of the 28.4 Mha (SE = 0.7) deforested, over half were either initially left idle or experienced crop failure before a land use could be detected, and 44% remained unused for 5 y or more. A majority (54%) of these areas were cleared mechanically (not by escaped fires), and in cases where idle lands were eventually converted to productive uses, oil palm plantations were by far the most common outcome. The apparent deliberate creation of idle deforested land in Indonesia and subsequent conversion of idle areas to oil palm plantations indicates that speculation and land banking for palm oil substantially contribute to forest loss, although failed plantations could also contribute to this dynamic. We also found that in Sumatra, few lowland forests remained, suggesting that a lack of remaining forest appropriate for palm oil production, together with an extensive area of banked deforested land, may partially explain slowing forest loss in Indonesia in recent years.

Funder

Climate and Land Use Alliance

USDA | U.S. Forest Service

NASA Land Cover and Land Use Change program

Global Forest Watch

Bezos Earth Fund Global Land Cover and Land Use Monitoring

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

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