Indonesia:
Government Policy on Palm Oil Development
Based
on an analysis of the evolving legislation on plantations, it
is possible to identify five phases in government policies for
palm oil development in Indonesia. We shall call these the PIR-Trans
phase (up until October 1993), the Deregulation Phase (1993-1996),
the Privatisation Phase (1996-1998), the Cooperatives Phase (1998-2002)
and the current Decentralization Phase (2002-2006). It should
be noted, however, that these phases were neither wholly discrete
nor did the initiation of a new phase imply the ending of the
previously launched processes.
PIR-Trans:
Before October 1993, Government efforts
to establish oil palm plantations were centred on taking over
forested areas on the Outer islands and allocating these areas
to PTPN [State-owned plantation company] operators, which controlled
both inti [large-scale operations on extensive areas]
and plasma [individually operated smallholdings]
holdings, supplied with a workforce and smallholders through
the Transmigration programme. Laws were passed in 1986 and 1990
designed to ensure better coordination between government agencies
and so speed up the process of permitting required to release
forest lands for conversion. Control of forests remained centralized
with regional forestry offices (Kanwil Kehutanan) only
being authorised to release up to 100 ha. for plantations.
During this period,
resident communities’ customary rights in land were often not
recognised. Instead indigenous peoples were inserted into the
Transmigration schemes either by being resettled as Transmigrant
villages made up of local people (Translok) or by being
slipped into mixed settlements (Transmigrasi sisipan) comprising
local people and State-sponsored migrants from Java, Madura and
Bali. Most PIR-Trans schemes allocated only 2 hectares to each
Transmigrant family, half of which they were expected to plant
with rice and half of which was to be developed as oil palm to
supply the mills established alongside the nucleus estate. Migrants
complained of sub-standard housing, low prices for fresh fruit
bunches of oil palm (FFB) and long delays in the payment of wages,
settling debts and transferring land titles.
Deregulation Phase:
In October 1993, the government passed two laws as part of a National
Deregulation Policy Package. The overall aim of the policy was
to give local governors greater authority to promote regional
development, while seeking to ensure that private companies had
a long term commitment to the areas they were investing in. Under
these laws, Governors could issue permits for the conversion of
forest areas up to 200 hectares, while areas over 200 hectares
remained the responsibility of the Directorate General of Estate
Crops in Jakarta. Private companies applying for forest conversion
permits, on the other hand, were not allowed to transfer ownership
of leaseholds so secured.
Privatisation
Phase: The final years of the Suharto
dictatorship saw a concerted drive across several sectors, including
estate crops, to privatise para-statal companies, encourage private
sector initiatives and facilitate foreign direct investment. A
number of laws were passed designed to accelerate estate crop
development in this way and ensure fair play between companies.
The procedures by which companies secured permits for developing
estates were clarified – a temporary, one year, start-up permit
(ijin prinsip), which could be converted to a permanent
permit (ijin tetap) and to which an expansion permit could
be added (ijin perluasan). Requirements were introduced
to ensure that companies planning to convert forests first secured
the consent of any logging companies with logging permits (HPH)
over the same areas. A new law also clarified that forest lands
cleared and planted with estate crops were to be classified in
Provincial Spatial Plans as agricultural lands but with no rights
to plantation permits attached.
Cooperatives Phase:
The fall of the Suharto regime resulted in an era of reform (reformasi)
which allowed politicians with alternative ideas about rural development
to gain power temporarily. Efforts were made to encourage models
of development that would allow local communities to benefit more
directly from lands and natural resources. While a law was passed
prohibiting forest conversion in protected forests (hutan lindung),
so harmonizing local and regional spatial planning procedures,
a decree was passed to allow three-year plantation permits (ijin
usaha perkebunan) to be granted to cooperatives for areas
up to 1000 hectares by provincial Governors or up to 20,000 hectares
by the central Ministry of Forests and Estate Crops.
Decentralization
Phase: The fall of Suharto also
ushered in a period of radical political change in Indonesia,
whereby far greater powers to control lands, resources and to
administer regional budgets were entrusted to local governments
and legislatures. Since 2002, these changes have also had some
impact on the development of the palm oil sector, while still
limiting local authorities to encouraging medium-scale plantations.
A new law allows district level regents (bupati) to issue
permits of up to 1000 hectares, while any areas overlapping district
boundaries remain the prerogative of Provincial Governors. However,
authority to issue permits of over 1000 hectares was entrusted
to the Ministry of Agriculture. Moreover, responding to concerns
about the rate at which forests were being cleared for plantations
even though vast areas of degraded lands were available for planting,
in 2005 the Government passed another law establishing a moratorium
on forest conversion for estate crops.
The moratorium was
introduced following the signing of a letter of intent between
the Government of Indonesia and the IMF, although this did not
make clear for how long the moratorium should be maintained and
whether it referred to a moratorium on actual conversion of forest
cover or a moratorium on changing the status of forest lands to
allow planting. In February 2005, the Ministry of Forests released
two contradictory circulars to the local government. One stated
that the moratorium was still effective, while the other stated
that in order to optimise the use of forest land for estate crops
the Ministry would evaluate proposals for conversion on their
merits. The same split views can be discerned in the way the Ministry
has responded to the proposal to establish 1.8 m. ha. oil palm
plantation in the heart of Borneo.
Excerpted from: “Promised
Land: Palm Oil and Land Acquisition in Indonesia - Implications
for Local Communities and Indigenous Peoples”, by Forest Peoples
Programme, Sawit Watch, HuMA and the World Agroforestry Centre,
http://www.sawitwatch.or.id/images/Publikasi/Land%20Acquisition%20(English).pdf