4.7 Article

Hidden challenges for conservation and development along the Trans-Papuan economic corridor

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
Volume 92, Issue -, Pages 98-106

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envsci.2018.11.011

Keywords

Papua; Infrastructure; Corridor; Conservation; Development; Customary lands

Funding

  1. James Cook University

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The island of New Guinea harbours one of the world's largest tracts of intact tropical forest, with 41% of its land area in Indonesian Papua (Papua and Papua Barat Provinces). Within Papua, the advent of a 4000-km 'development corridor' reflects a national agenda promoting primary-resource extraction and economic integration. Papua, a resource frontier containing vast forest and mineral resources, increasingly exhibits new conservation and development dynamics suggestive of the earlier frontier development phases of other Indonesian regions. Local environmental and social considerations have been discounted in the headlong rush to establish the corridor and secure access to natural resources. Peatland and forest conversion are increasingly extensive within the epicentres of economic development. Deforestation frontiers are emerging along parts of the expanding development corridor, including within the Lorentz World Heritage Site. Customary land rights for Papua's indigenous people remain an afterthought to resource development, fomenting conditions contrary to conservation and sustainable development. A centralised development agenda within Indonesia underlies virtually all of these changes. We recommend specific actions to address the environmental, economic, and socio-political challenges of frontier development along the Papuan corridor.

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