Former Minister of Maritime Affairs and Fisheries (KKP), Susi Pudjiastuti, urged President Prabowo Subianto to evaluate and halt the timber industry if it turns out that state revenues from the sector are not commensurate with the environmental damage and human lives lost. The devastating floods in Sumatra (Aceh, North Sumatra, and West Sumatra), which killed thousands of people, have captured national and even international attention. The government must elevate the status of the disaster to a national disaster so that the causes, perpetrators, impacts, and future anticipation can be identified. Without an elevating status, the problem will not be adequately addressed and foreign aid will be reluctant to enter. The perpetrators who caused the natural disaster, including the makers of the policies that supported it, must be investigated and prosecuted.
And that's not even counting other material losses, such as the destruction of infrastructure, homes, and so on. This tragic and heartbreaking situation would not have occurred if forests had been properly protected. When forests are cleared for palm oil plantations without adequate consideration and calculation, or solely for profit, the price is thousands of human lives, as Susie Pujiastuti noted. The timber from land clearing for palm oil plantations is so abundant that it becomes a source of significant profits.
Indonesia is currently the world's palm oil king with production of more than half (50%) of the world's palm oil or around 50 million tons of palm oil / CPO per year and the demand for palm oil continues to increase as the world's population continues to need a supply of vegetable oil (for food and biofuel). Palm oil is the world's largest vegetable oil production, beating other vegetable oils such as soybean oil, sunflower oil and canola oil. Palm oil with soybean oil, sunflower oil and rapeseed / canola oil are the four main vegetable oils in the world, where producing countries compete with each other (read: trade war) to market their vegetable oil products. The advantage of palm oil is the highest productivity of palm oil among other vegetable oils or the most efficient among the four most consumed vegetable oils in the world. For comparison, to produce 1 ton of palm oil requires 0.25 hectares, while to produce 1 ton of soybean oil requires 2 hectares, then 1 ton of sunflower seed oil requires 1.43 hectares and production of 1 ton of rapeseed / canola oil requires 1.25 hectares.
Another advantage is that palm oil tree cannot grow in subtropical countries like Europe and North America, so this should be a blessing for Indonesia, not a disaster. This is despite the fact that they are not native to Indonesia but originate from West Africa. With an area of nearly 17 million hectares, Indonesia is the owner of the largest palm oil plantations in the world and a significant source of foreign exchange for the country. However, efforts to boost palm oil production through extensification must not ignore the aspects of safety and environmental sustainability. This extensification can even be slowed down through a number of intensifications, one of which is the application of biochar. For more details, read here.
The sustainability and deforestation aspects are 2 important points especially for a number of European countries to assess plantation products, especially palm oil and even the EUDR (EU Deforestation Regulation) will be implemented in about 1 year or fully effective January 1, 2027. But unfortunately, these European countries apply double standards because palm oil is treated very strictly even with various layered regulations, but this is not the case with other major vegetable oils, namely soybean oil, sunflower oil and rapeseed / canola oil.
The Sumatran floods recently demonstrated a haphazard policy (out of the bounds of sustainability) that was then exposed by the disaster. Land clearing resulted in a massive amount of logs. The abundance of logs created a seemingly endless island of logs, but they also polluted the environment and disrupted mobility. The losses caused by the floods were so great that they formed a seemingly endless island of logs due to the sheer size of the piles. One of the post-flood measures is clearing these logs. Some of these logs have high economic value and can therefore be utilized. Of course the profits from the sale of these logs are given to the people affected by the disaster caused by the indiscriminate logging. This distribution helps accelerate post-disaster recovery.
Technically, the wood needs to be selected based on its type, size, and market potential. Meanwhile, wood that is less economical or considered waste, such as because it is too small, broken into small pieces, split, and so on, can be used for biomass fuel, such as wood pellet production. The production capacity of a wood pellet factory is adjusted to the volume of waste, market demand, and investment in the factory's production machinery. The location of the wood pellet factory should also be close to the raw materials and not far from the export port. Several treatments, such as washing, are necessary because the wood is dirty and muddy. Similarly, wood submerged in the sea can potentially increase its chlorine content. Besides wood pellets, other biomass fuel products that can be produced include wood chips and wood briquettes. Market readiness is crucial in selecting biomass fuel products to be produced.
Biomass fuel production from flood wood waste is certainly not sustainable. Although the volume of wood waste is mounting and will only be depleted in a few years, consideration must be given to continuing to produce sustainable raw materials, especially after the flood wood waste is gone. Bare lands need to be reforested, as do critical and even idle lands. Appropriate plant selection and land mapping are essential. To sustain the production of biomass fuels such as wood pellets, energy plantations need to be established on suitable land. Energy plantation plants such as calliandra and gamal/gliricidia have taproots, making them useful for controlling erosion and landslides. In fact, within a certain area, these energy plantations can generate hundreds of trillions in revenue; for more details, read here. Likewise, other production forests, which produce wood for various industries and purposes, must also be managed properly to be a blessing, not a disaster.










