Singapore, blanketed under a smoky haze for days, beseeched Indonesia yesterday to douse fires lit for the illegal clearing of forests that are causing the worst air pollution in the region since 2006.
Malaysia has also blamed poor air quality in some of its southern towns on fires on Indonesia’s Sumatra island.
Singaporean Minister for Foreign Affairs George Yeo (楊榮文) telephoned his Indonesian counterpart, Marty Natalegawa, to express concern about the haze and reiterated Singapore’s immediate readiness to help Jakarta put out fires on Sumatra.
PHOTO: AFP
“Minister Yeo informed Minister Marty that the PSI [pollution standards index] went over 100 yesterday and cases of respiratory problems including asthma had increased significantly,” a foreign ministry statement said
A reading above 100 on Singapore’s PSI is considered unhealthy.
The fires and smoke pollution are a regular occurrence and can scare off tourists and disrupt transport, leading to strains in generally good ties in the region.
However, Indonesia, the world’s top palm oil producer which has a history of weak forestry law enforcement, appears unable to do anything about the problem.
Yeo’s call came a day after Singaporean Minister for the Environment Yaacob Ibrahim spoke with his Indonesian counterpart, Gusti Hatta, urging Jakarta “to allocate the necessary resources and implement timely and effective measures to solve the haze situation.”
The haze, which started this week, is likely to have been caused by fires lit to clear illegally forests opened up for palm oil plantations in Dumai and Bengkalis districts in Sumatra’s Riau Province, an Indonesian forestry official said.
Illegal land clearing by palm oil developers is common in Indonesia. Fires clear land quickly and reduce the acidity of peat soil, but release vast amounts of greenhouse gases.
The fires come ahead of an Indonesian plan to impose a two-year moratorium on new permits to clear natural forest from next year as planters are looking to expand plantations on the back of rising prices.
Malaysian Natural Resources and Environment Minister Douglas Uggah Embas said yesterday that he had also written to urge his Indonesian counterpart “to take appropriate action to mitigate the problem” and to offer help putting out the fires.
Malaysian Health Minister Liow Tiong Lai added: “We know that there is open burning in Indonesia so we hope that Indonesia can take some measures to reduce open burning.”
Air quality yesterday improved with better visibility in both Singapore and Malaysia. In Singapore, the pollution level was judged “moderate,” after an “unhealthy” level on Thursday, while many schools in the Malysian town of Muar reopened.
The haze returned to the region less than a week after Southeast Asia’s environment ministers met in Brunei to address the problem of fires.
The worst haze in the region was in 1997 to 19998, when drought caused by the El Nino weather pattern led to major Indonesian fires. The smoke spread to Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand and cost more than US$9 billion in damage to tourism, transport and farming.
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