Indonesia’s green economy efforts deserve scrutiny, but also support

Indonesia’s green economy efforts deserve scrutiny, but also support

By Kasit Piromya

At the recent COP26 climate conference in the Scottish city of Glasgow, Indonesia was one of more than 40 countries that pledged to transition away from “unabated coal power generation” in the next few decades.

Although Indonesia endorsed just three of the pledge’s four clauses – excluding Clause 3, related to issuing new permits for coal-fired projects – it was a step in the right direction from the world’s biggest coal exporter, and one of the biggest emitters of greenhouse gases globally, for which coal comprises a significant amount. In its pledge, Indonesia promised to reach net zero by 2060, or sooner with international assistance, and said it would “consider accelerating coal phase out” into the 2040s, on the condition that it receives international financial and technical assistance.

The caveat is in many ways a reasonable one. After all, wealthier countries have been the main cause of global emissions, while developing nations have felt the bulk of their impacts.

While Indonesia deserves support in these efforts, it also deserves considerable scrutiny. After all, within days of signing onto a pledge to end deforestation by 2030, the first major announcement at COP26, Indonesia appeared to renege on its commitments, with Environment and Forestry Minister Siti Nurbaya Bakar reportedly calling the pledge “clearly inappropriate and unfair”. Yet, between 2001 and 2019, Indonesia lost more than 26 million hectares of forest, a 17 percent decrease in tree cover since the turn of the century, and one of the main drivers of greenhouse gas emissions in Southeast Asia in recent decades.

On top of halting deforestation and ending its reliance on coal, there are many other areas where Indonesia can step up its response to the climate crisis. In late September, ASEAN Parliamentarians for Human Rights (APHR) published a report, Building Back Better: Southeast Asia’s transition to a green economy after COVID-19, which evaluated whether the recovery measures taken in response to the COVID-19 pandemic in the region, including Indonesia, promoted a transition to a green economy.

Indonesia’s performance in almost all areas of the report was deeply disappointing. Of the 11 “green policies” identified as those that can accelerate a green economic transition, Indonesia had adopted just three. This included a US$240 million capital injection into PT Kereta Api Indonesia, the state-owned rail company, supporting clean transport infrastructure, and reducing traffic congestion as part of its National Economic Recovery Program. It also took measures to accelerate solar energy production.

In contrast, however, Indonesia had the dubious distinction among the countries of the region of adopting all four negative policies identified as contributing to global emissions. These included providing subsidies for environmentally harmful industries and products such as oil exploitation, deregulating environmental standards, and supporting polluting businesses such as airlines, while providing them with no incentives to adopt more climate-friendly practices. Also in 2020, Indonesia’s House of Representatives passed the Mining Law, which allows automatic mining permit extensions of up to 20 years. Mining activities are likely to increase greenhouse gas emissions from land use, which already accounts for almost half of the country’s total emissions.

There’s much that can be done. The measures adopted as part of the COVID-19 economic recovery, and pledges made during COP26, present a unique opportunity to ensure Indonesia moves away from the current destructive economic model, and instead builds back better.

Some progress has been made at COP26. On the sidelines of the event, Indonesia, as well as the Philippines, signed an agreement with the Asian Development Bank (ADB) to establish an Energy Transition Mechanism (ETM), an “ambitious plan that will upgrade Indonesia’s energy infrastructure and accelerate the clean energy transition,” according to Finance Minister Sri Mulyani Indrawati. This builds upon the IEA-Indonesia Energy Transition, which was agreed in March.

These are welcome steps that require careful scrutiny, while other steps are also required. This includes encouraging dialogue between constituents and policy makers on the impacts of climate change on their communities, as well as the harms caused by laws such as the Mining Law. The government must also put in place green conditions for supporting large businesses, including state-owned enterprises, as well as promote policies that provide job training in sectors that are positive to the green economy, including renewable energy and energy efficiency.

Finally, the Indonesian government must be part of this unprecedented moment in history, and drastically shift away from its reliance on coal, which has done so much to destroy our planet. This means removing fossil fuel subsidies, phasing out coal by 2040, and creating an environment that enables the growth of renewable energy investment.

Lawmakers lie at the heart of fulfilling these climate change commitments and after our global leaders met in Scotland, now is the time for us to hold them accountable and ensure they move beyond vague platitudes made in the corridors of power, and toward real policies that improve people’s lives, and protect our planet.

The article originally appeared in the Jakarta Post 

Toolkit – Transition to a Green Economy after COVID-19

Toolkit – Transition to a Green Economy after COVID-19

The COVID-19 pandemic and its subsequent economic recession have revealed the failure and fragility of
our economic system, which has prioritized business interests over people and the environment,
deepened inequalities, and failed to protect the most vulnerable. 

To recover from the recession caused by the pandemic, countries are now adopting recovery measures
to boost their economy. The type of economic model these measures will support is crucial in shaping
our future, and this moment presents an ideal opportunity to break away from the past and shift
towards a more just, sustainable and resilient economy. 

Shifting towards a greener economy is an essential part of “building back better” by moving away from
fossil fuel-dependent industries and instead towards clean and renewable sources of energy that help
reduce Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and global warming.

It will not only help the region to more rapidly absorb the immediate impact of the recession, but also to
avoid and be more resilient to future similar shocks and crises caused by climate change. 

To help parliamentarians seize this opportunity APHR evaluated recovery measures taken in Indonesia,
Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Timor-Leste between February 2020 and April 2021.
This assessment was undertaken to identify best practices MPs can adopt in their respective countries,
as well as structural obstacles they need to overcome to promote a transition to a green economy.

These toolkits are designed for MPs to help them advance a green economic recovery after COVID-19.

DOWNLOAD IN ENGLISH | BURMESE | BAHASA INDONESIAN | KHMER | LAO | MALAYSIAN | TETUM | THAI
| VIETNAMESE

You can read the full report here.

Southeast Asian governments must seize moment, enact measures for green recovery from COVID-19, new report says

Southeast Asian governments must seize moment, enact measures for green recovery from COVID-19, new report says

Please click here for a Thai translation of this statement

Please click here for a Malay translation of this statement

Please click here for a Bahasa Indonesian translation of this statement

JAKARTA – Despite Southeast Asia being one of the world’s most at-risk regions from the impacts of climate change, governments in the region have failed to capitalize on the opportunity to build back better from the COVID-19 pandemic by introducing recovery measures that help promote a transition to a green economy, a new report has found. Many have instead used their COVID-19 recovery packages to enact policies that contribute to global warming and create major barriers to a low-carbon economic transition. 

The new report, entitled “Building Back Better: Southeast Asia’s transition to a green economy after COVID-19”, published today by ASEAN Parliamentarians for Human Rights (APHR), evaluated pandemic recovery measures taken by Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Timor-Leste between February 2020 and April 2021. 

“The COVID-19 pandemic, and the economic recession that followed, has brought into sharp focus the injustices ingrained in our current economic model, which for too long has pursued profits over people and the environment, exacerbated existing inequalities, and done nothing to protect the most vulnerable,” said Charles Santiago, chair of APHR and a Malaysian Member of Parliament (MP). “The economic recovery from the pandemic has presented the perfect opportunity to change towards a green and sustainable economy that works for everyone.” 

“While our governments have so far fallen drastically short when it comes to implementing much-needed policy changes, as MPs we have a crucial role to play, and must do everything we can to urge the leaders in our region to invest in smart policies for a green transition,” Santiago said. 

APHR found that governments have adopted limited green policy measures as part of their national COVID-19 recovery plans, with examples including subsidies and tax reductions for environmentally friendly products, tax increases for environmentally harmful products, as well as investment in clean transport and energy infrastructure. 

However, these measures were critically undermined by numerous “brown policies” that increase greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. For example, bailouts with no green strings attached for high GHG-emitting businesses such as aviation, oil and gas, and land development exceeded USD 50 billion in Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines and Singapore. 

The issue of how to tackle climate change is particularly timely, ahead of the 2021 United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP26), which will begin in Glasgow, Scotland, in late October, APHR said. 

“It is mind blowing that while world scientists keep warning us that we are running out of time, and while people and economies of the region are increasingly feeling the impacts of climate change, our governments are continuing to support the highly emitting industries of the past, and have not prioritized policies and budgets that promote green and sustainable development of the region,” said Mercy Barends, an APHR Board Member and Indonesian MP.

Among the focal countries, Singapore had the most recovery measures across sectors that supported a green recovery, whereas Indonesia and the Philippines had the most recovery measures opposing it, APHR found. 

“Initiating a green recovery would have huge benefits for our region. Not only would it help limit global warming, but would also help us to recover quicker from the pandemic, as well as build an economy that is more resilient,” said Pita Limjaroenrat, a Thai MP and APHR member.

“Lawmakers lie at the heart of fulfilling climate change commitments, whether that’s through our role in pushing progressive legislation, overseeing national budgets, or in our mandate to be the voice of our constituents, who will be the worst affected by climate change if no action is taken,” he said. 

“Building Back Better”: Southeast Asia’s transition to a green economy after COVID-19

“Building Back Better”: Southeast Asia’s transition to a green economy after COVID-19

Report, September 2021

The COVID-19 pandemic and its subsequent economic recession have revealed the failure and fragility of
our economic system, which has prioritized business interests over people and the environment,
deepened inequalities, and failed to protect the most vulnerable. 

To recover from the recession caused by the pandemic, countries are now adopting recovery measures
to boost their economy. The type of economic model these measures will support is crucial in shaping
our future, and this moment presents an ideal opportunity to break away from the past and shift
towards a more just, sustainable and resilient economy. 

Shifting towards a greener economy is an essential part of “building back better” by moving away from
fossil fuel-dependent industries and instead towards clean and renewable sources of energy that help
reduce Greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions and global warming.

It will not only help the region to more rapidly absorb the immediate impact of the recession, but also to
avoid and be more resilient to future similar shocks and crises caused by climate change. 

To help parliamentarians seize this opportunity APHR evaluated recovery measures taken in Indonesia,
Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand, and Timor-Leste between February 2020 and April 2021.
This assessment was undertaken to identify best practices MPs can adopt in their respective countries,
as well as structural obstacles they need to overcome to promote a transition to a green economy.

DOWNLOAD IN: ENGLISH (FULL REPORT)

EXECUTIVE SUMMARIES: BURMESE | BAHASA INDONESIAN | KHMER | LAO | MALAYSIAN | TETUM | THAI | VIETNAMESE

TOOLKITS TO HELP MPs TO ADVANCE A GREEN ECONOMY ARE AVAILABLE HERE