Adianto P. Simamora, The Jakarta Post , Jakarta | Thu, 02/18/2010 11:00 AM | Nationa
http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2010/02/18/govt-looks-seas-potential-carbon-sink.html
 
Research conducted by the Maritime Affairs and Fishery Ministry  shows that Indonesia’s seas can absorb roughly 0.3 gigatons of carbon  dioxide each year (300 million metric tons), far more than previous  estimates of up to 40 million tons.
Officials, however, declined  to comment on whether Indonesia would promote the ocean as alternative  resource in efforts to mitigate human-induced climate change.
“We  are still focusing on adaptation measures,” Marine and Fishery Research  Agency chief Gellwynn Jusuf told The Jakarta Post on Wednesday.
The  country’s first-ever research of carbon in oceans will be officially  launched at the global ministerial meeting in Bali on Feb. 25.
Environment  ministers from 192 countries are slated to attend the four-day  conference, organized by the United Nations Environment Program (UNEP).
Oceans  will be one of the main issues discussed at the meeting, which will be  opened by President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.
Indonesia has 5.8  million square kilometers of seas.
Gellwynn said the research did  not include the capability of sea grass, mangroves or coral reefs to  absorb the carbon.
Data from the National Action Plan on climate  change launched by President Yudhoyono in Bali in 2007 said the 61,000  square kilometers of coral reefs could absorb up to 73 million tons of  the carbon dioxide, one of the main contributors to climate change.
The  action plan says Indonesia’s 30.000 square kilometers of the sea grass  could absorb up to 56 million tons of CO2, and 93,000 square kilometers  of mangroves could absorb 75 million tons of carbon each year.
The  government, however, had not used data from the action plan in  international talks on the oceans’ role in mitigating climate change.
Gellwynn  said Indonesia and the UNEP would sign a memorandum of understanding on  the blue carbon concept to help Jakarta develop oceanic research in  relation to climate change.
The Bali meeting is expected to issue  the “ocean decision” that will mandate the UNEP to mainstream marine  and coastal strategy into its program of work to help protect oceans  from impacts of increasing global temperatures.
“If all  ministers agree on the ocean declaration, the UNEP will promote the  assessment of marine areas and ecosystems,” senior ministry official  Hendra Yusran Sira said.
People’s Coalition for Justice in  Fisheries (Kiara) secretary-general Riza Damanik said the government  must also take into account the amount of carbon released by oceans.
“The  claim is incorrect if the government only calculates the capability of  oceans to absorb carbon. Scientific research shows that oceans absorb  and release carbon at the same time,” he told the Post.
Most of  the carbon absorbed by oceans is not the anthropogenic carbon that  causes climate change, he said.
“It is carbon from  photosynthesis,” he said.
