Saving the Rainforest, Rebuilding Communities, One Orang Utan at a Time

Dr Willie Smits_www.abc.com.au

Dr. Willie Smits and a posse of Orang Utans he saved in Southeast Kalimantan (Borneo).

One man’s odyssey that began with his compassion for the plight of the endangered Orang Utan in the jungles of Kalimantan (Indonesia’s Borneo), has developed into a truly exemplary life-long work of deforestation, rebuilding communities, reversing the adverse effects of illegal logging and human-inflicted forest fires, and of course saving and protecting the Orang Utan’s natural habitat. A process that has evolved into a vibrant community where man, beast and the rainforest live in harmony, giving impetus to a sustainable economy, jobs and better education. It all started with the simple question of: “How can I save the Orang Utan from extinction?” The story is not as much about the commendable results, as it is about one man’s journey of realizing this seemingly unattainable dream. That man is Willie Smit, a Dutchman, who recently spoke at 2009 TED Conference.

 

Reposted from Ethan Zuckerman‘s Blog| Feb 6, 2009

Willie Smits lives in Borneo, Indonesia, where he works as a forrester and microbiologist. But he’s better know as the guy who saves orangutans. And if his projects continue to succeed, he may be known as the man who saved Borneo.

Smits tells us about seeing “the saddest eyes I’ve ever seen” on the face of a baby orangutan in a cage in a Borneo market. Later that day, he found the animal, half dead, on a gargae heap – “of course, the cage had been salvaged.’ He nursed the orangutan back to life, and she lives in the sanctuary he maintains, with her children and grandchildren, some of the almost a thousand orangutan he cares for.

When Smits tells us that his project protects a thousand orangutans, the audience erupts into applause… which makes him extremely angry. “No, no! Don’t you understand? I care for more orangutans than all the zoos in the world because we’re so bad at protecting them in the wild.”

Orangutans are losing habitat to deforestation, and the deforestation comes from clearing old-growth rainforest and building oil palm plantations. Indonesia is madly planting oil palms to sell biofuels, and may be creating an environmental disaster in the process. The country is now responsible for more CO2 emissions than any nations but the US and China… and Indonesia has virtually no heavy industry. The damage comes simply from removing forests.

To save orangutans, Smits needs to save forests. To save forests, he’s trying an incredibly ambitious experiment – rebuilding a forest in Samboja Lestari, an area in eastern Borneo that had been turned into a biological desert through deforestation. With all large trees gone, all other plants died, leaving a waste of dry grasses… and desperate human poverty.

In cooperation with the Indonesian government, Smits has transformed the environment and created over 3,000 jobs. The project has reintroduced bird, lizard and primate species, and has mitigated both floods and fires. But it hasn’t been easy.

This area of Borneo is farmed using slash and burn techniques. These fires often spiral out of control, and at this point, much of the area is plagued with underground fires. When the earth dries, these fires can come to the surface and rapidly burn millions of hectares. In 1998, a fire burned 5.5 million hectares.

The key to preventing Borneo from burning is the sugar palm. Smits discovered them because he was required to give six to his father in law as the dowry for his wife, an Indonesian princess. Not only are the trees fire and flood resistant, they produce sugar water every day, which can be tapped and used as a biofuel. Smits calls them biological PV cells, which yield three times as much fuel per hectare as any other crop.

To rebuilding these forests, Smits is trying recreate the complexity of nature – Acacia mangium trees help shade out grasses, protect soil and allow microclimates to form. Banboo can be used with Acacia timber to build structures… but the bamboo can burn unless it grows along waterlines. They can help filter the water, helping mitigate pollution. Eventually, Smits throws his hands up and says, “It’s complicated.”

It is, but it’s also very simple. Working closely with people in the local villages, farmers are planting crops like beans and pineapples between palms, giving the farmers free land. The crops feed the orangutans, and everyone makes money… by avoiding monocultures and figuring out how forests are actually made by nature, it may be possible to rebuild the forests and save our primate bretheren.

It gets even better. Smits now sees evidence that trees are rain machines. Despite widespread drought in the area, there’s now dramatically increased rainfall over the land he’s helping rehabilitate.

This entry was posted in Biodiversity, Endangered Species, Global Warming, Illegal Logging, Indonesia, Orang Utan, Rainforest, Rainforest Destruction, Sustainable and tagged , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

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