Stephen Coates Yahoo News 12 Nov 09;
JAKARTA (AFP) – Greenpeace activists from around the world chained themselves to excavators in a logged peatland forest in Indonesia on Thursday to demand more US action to stop deforestation.
Fifty activists from a dozen countries, including major greenhouse gas emitters the United States and China, also unfurled a massive yellow banner with a message for US President Barack Obama.
"Obama: you can stop this," it read, ahead of the US president's visit to the region at the weekend for a summit of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation forum in Singapore.
"Greenpeace is sending President Obama an urgent call to action from the frontline of climate and forest destruction," Greenpeace USA forest campaigner Rolf Skar said.
"He has promised to take decisive action on climate change, yet with just weeks left before December's critical UN climate summit, his administration is actively undermining and stalling global climate change negotiations."
The Copenhagen summit has been convened to seal a treaty to succeed the Kyoto Protocol, whose obligations to cut carbon emissions expire in 2012, but there is little hope of agreement due to long-standing differences between rich and developing countries over who should bear the burden of lowering emissions.
Indonesia is the third biggest emitter of greenhouse gases blamed for global warming, after China and the United States, and 80 pecent of its emissions are the result of deforestation.
The clearing and burning of Indonesia's peatlands account for four percent of total global emissions, according to Greenpeace.
The protest was staged in the Kampar peninsular, in Sumatra island's Riau province, where a major peatland forest is under threat from logging concessions and clearing for palm oil plantations.
Ignoring Greenpeace's calls for a logging moratorium, the Southeast Asian archipelago continues to shred its forests -- home to rare species such as tigers, elephants and orangutans -- faster than anywhere else in the world.
"Indonesia is climate change's 'ground zero'," Greenpeace Southeast Asia campaigner Bustar Maitar said.
"Stopping forest destruction here and around the globe is not only one of the quickest and most cost effective ways to combat climate change but is essential in order to avert runway climate change in our lifetime."