Wednesday, September 23, 2015

Joko heads to Borneo to check fire fighting as haze grows hazardous

Joko heads to Borneo to check fire fighting as haze grows hazardous

[JAKARTA] Indonesia's President Joko Widodo is heading to Borneo and Sumatra islands to check on efforts to stop forest blazes that are causing pollution across the region.
Mr Joko, who has set a deadline of two weeks to a month to stop the burning, will speak to fire fighters in southern Kalimantan on Borneo on Wednesday and then head to Sumatra for two days, his office said in a statement. A pollution gauge in Pontianak in Kalimantan worsened to 779.4 on Wednesday, double the level considered hazardous, while in Singapore a three-hour index was up to an unhealthy level of 116 as of 11am.
Joko, known as Jokowi, is facing regional pressure to step up efforts to combat perennial forest burning by cracking down on companies with fires on their concessions.
The government on Tuesday said it suspended the permits for three Indonesian palm oil planters and revoked the permit for a forestry company.
"There are 14 companies that are being investigated by police," said Fadrizal Labay, the head of forestry and plantations for Sumatra's Riau islands, near Singapore. "There will be a possibility of criminal and administrative action."
PT Langgam Inti Hibrindo, one of the palm companies named by the government and majority-owned by PT Provident Agro, said on Tuesday it was not responsible for causing any fires and will cooperate with the authorities.
Indonesia's enforcement of its laws against plantation owners is key to resolving the haze, Singapore's Environment Minister Vivian Balakrishnan said on Friday. The smog has led the city-state to cancel outdoor events and flights have been stopped across the region.
Responsibility for the blazes, which also emit greenhouse gases from burning peatlands, is complicated by uncertainty over land rights and overlapping permits in a country with widespread official corruption.
BLOOMBERG

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