World

Indonesia ends deforestation pact with Norway, cites non-payment

Decision to terminate agreement will not affect commitment to reduce greenhouse gas emissions, says Jakarta

Updated 4 years ago · Published on 11 Sep 2021 10:15PM

Indonesia ends deforestation pact with Norway, cites non-payment
Deforestation control is part of Indonesia’s commitments in the global Paris accord to combat climate change and aims to limit deforestation to between 325,000ha and 450,000ha a year. – Reuters pic, September 11, 2021

JAKARTA – Indonesia has ended a deal with Norway on cooperation to reduce carbon emissions from deforestation, due to lack of payment, the Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

Last year, Norway announced a US$56 million (RM231.6 million) contribution to Indonesia, based on its 2016-2017 results on curbing deforestation under a United Nations-backed forest-conservation scheme known as REDD+.

In the statement yesterday, Indonesia’s Foreign Ministry said it decided to terminate the agreement due to “the lack of concrete progress on the implementation of the obligation of the government of Norway”, after the Southeast Asian country met its commitment to cut greenhouse gas emissions by the equivalent of 11.2 million tonnes of carbon dioxide emissions in the 2016-2017 period.

“The decision to terminate the letter of intent will in no way affect the Indonesian government commitment to reduce greenhouse gas emissions,” it said.

Norway’s International Climate and Forest Initiative said discussions on Oslo’s payments were “constructive and progressing well, within the frameworks set by our two countries’ regulatory limits”.

The group said in a statement that it plans to continue supporting Indonesia’s efforts in climate change mitigation.

The Norwegian embassy in Jakarta did not immediately respond to Reuters’ request for comment today.

Deforestation control is part of Indonesia’s commitments in the global Paris accord to combat climate change. It aims to limit deforestation to between 325,000 and 450,000 hectares a year, a level it believes will still allow economic development.

Indonesia under the Paris deal has committed to reduce carbon emission by 41% by 2030 with international assistance. Government officials have said the country aims to reach net zero emissions by 2060. – Reuters, September 11, 2021

Related News

Malaysia / 1mth

Malaysia’s missile deal collapse exposes hidden risks in global arms trade

Opinion / 2mth

Norway harshly cancels NSM missile supply contract to Malaysia

Malaysia / 2mth

Hajiji denies claims Sebatik Island land was handed over to Indonesia

Events / 5mth

MoU inked for greater climate resilience

Malaysia / 5mth

Penang: DID to conduct comprehensive review of beach erosion

Sports & Fitness / 5mth

Malaysia clinches three titles at Indonesia Masters

Spotlight

Malaysia

Wild boar collision claims woman’s life as husband suffers injuries in Bera

Malaysia

Joe Zakaria attack: Questions emerge over safety of voices challenging Malaysian football status quo

Malaysia

DAP withdraws support for Melaka govt after assembly approves seven appointed seats

By Alfian Z.M. Tahir

Malaysia

Zara Qairina inquest: Qualifications of 76th witness questioned

Malaysia

Melaka passes appointed assembly members bill as DAP moves to pull out of State Govt

Malaysia

Anwar rejects snap election push, says Govt must prioritise economic recovery and stability

Malaysia

Rosmah sues Harith Iskander over comedy routine, alleges defamation and body shaming

You may be interested

World

One dead, another missing after boat catches fire and sinks near Alcatraz island

World

Air strikes continue, tankers come under fire as US-Iran conflict escalates in Hormuz Strait

World

Strong 6.3-magnitude earthquake strikes southeast of Loyalty Islands

World

Sexual violence against women and children remains deeply entrenched in India despite legal reforms

World

Cambodian casino tycoon's empire allegedly links to major cyber scam compound

World

US reimposes Iran blockade as Hormuz Strait conflict escalates

World

Thailand pub fire death toll climbs to 32 as negligence probe intensifies

World

6.5-magnitude earthquake strikes off Southern Philippines, aftershocks expected