Integrated Forest Fire Management
Project
in East Kalimantan
(IFFN No. 14 - January 1996, p. 29-30)
The "Integrated Forest Fire Management Project" is a bilateral technical cooperation project between the governments of Indonesia and Germany. The project is administered by the Ministry of Forestry (MoF) of Indonesia through the forest authorities in the Province of East Kalimantan (Kanwil and Dinas Kehutanan) and assisted by the German Agency for Technical Cooperation (GTZ). It is scheduled for a period of six years. The first three-year pilot-phase began in April 1994. The second three-year phase as well as a financial grant will be negotiated in 1996 and executed in 1997.
The Forest Fire Problem in Borneo:
For more than two decades the island of Borneo has had a serious forest fire problem. In
1982/83 the largest forest fire of the century burned for several months through
Kalimantan and Malaysia, affecting more than 5 million ha of forests. In 1987, 1991 and
1994 forest fires covered Indonesia and the neighbouring countries of Malaysia and
Singapore with smoky haze. Most fires are caused by or related to human activities:
Some natural factors have a strong influence on fire risk:
Consequences of Forest Fires:
Apart from the ecological damage which is very significant but difficult to quantify, the
economic loss is considerable. It is estimated that damage of more than US$ 50 million a
year occur to the forest plus a loss of 2 million m3 of timber. Additionally,
the smoke adversely affects health and impedes aircraft movement and shipping throughout
Southeast Asia.
History of the IFFM Project:
Following the 1991 forest fires and an extended smog situation all over SE Asia, the
Federal Republic of Germany responded to a request for assistance by the Indonesian
government. In June 1992 the National Planning Agency of Indonesia (Bappenas), assisted by
the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ), held an International
Workshop on Long-Term Integrated Forest Fire Management in Bandung (more details about the
Bandung Workshop: see January 1993 issue of IFFN). At this workshop, the core problem
identified was that no sufficiently developed fire management system existed in Indonesia.
A national Long-term Integrated Forest Fire Management System (IFFM) was proposed. The
IFFM project, based on this workshop, began in 1994. It is a pilot project situated in the
Bukit Soeharto area of East Kalimantan.
Integrated Fire Management is based on prevention, detection/presuppression, suppression, and application of prescribed or controlled burning. Uncontrolled wildfires are reduced by launching prevention campaigns for the public, rural villages and logging areas. Fire prevention also includes incentives and enforceable laws. In the project area fires are not only detected by observation towers manned during the high risk seasons and by mobile fire patrols. Additionally, a satellite receiving station will be established in Samarinda in 1996; it will show "hot spots" on a map covering all of the East Kalimantan Province.
Presuppression measures embrace infrastructure, logistics and preparedness in the event of a fire incident (e.g. maps, water supply stations, trained fire fighting units, etc.). Suppression is all of the activities used to extinguish or limit unwanted fire. Training will be furnished for government personnel as well as village volunteers. Controlled burning techniques will be introduced to reduce the escape of agricultural fires. Rural people frequently use fire in their agricultural activities. When uncontrolled, these fires can spread into and damage vast areas of lands. Controlled burning techniques include firebreak establishment, prescribed fires, and trained firefighters who can control the spread of fires.
IFFM Objectives and Results: The main objective is to establish an operational Integrated Fire Management System in the pilot region. The expected results are:
Implementation of IFFM:
IFFM is an Indonesian project with outside assistance. IFFM will be integrated into the
Indonesian administrative system, aimed at developing a sustainable fire management
organisation in cooperation with Kanwil and Dinas Kehutanan in East Kalimantan. The
executing agency (field level) is Dinas, and the lead counterpart agency for GTZ is the
Ministry of Forestry, Directorate of Forest Protection and Nature Conservation,
represented by Kanwil Kehutanan at the Provincial level. The people living in and around
the park will be integrated into the IFFM system. The project also seeks close cooperation
with other related projects (ITTO, FAO, GTZ and EU).
The Provincial Fire Management Center is located in Samarinda, with a district fire management office in the Bukit-Soeharto area. Four additional district fire management centres will be set up in Phase II (1997-2000). They will serve as an example for all of East Kalimantan as well as other forest fire prone areas throughout Indonesia.
| From: |
Integrated Forest Fire Management Project (IFFM/GTZ) |
|
Address: |
Jl. Kesuma Bangsa P.O. Box 1087 RI - Samarinda 75001 |