LANDSCAPE APPROACH MANAGEMENT. De-coupling Environmental Degradation from Sustainable Growth

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LANDSCAPE APPROACH MANAGEMENT De-coupling Environmental Degradation from Sustainable Growth 1

APP SUSTAINABILITY ROADMAP The Sustainability Roadmap Vision 2020, launched in 2012, is our strategy to place sustainability at the heart of operations CLIMATE CHANGE EMISSIONS SOLID WASTE REFORESTATION WATER MANGEMENT CONSERVATION & BIODIVERSITY FIBRE SOURCING EMPLOYEE WELLFARE COMMUNITY EMPOWERMENT HUMAN RIGHTS & INDIGENOUS PEOPLE

APP Forest Conservation Policy APP Vision 2020 Sustainability Roadmap Forest Conservation Policy Integrated Sustainable Forest Management Plan Landscape Conservation Integrated Forestry & Farming System for Community

No Deforestation & Sustainable Forest Management Natural forest moratorium was implemented to allow assessments which will determine natural forest areas to be protected, and provide recommendations for the sustainable forest management of APP suppliers concessions. HCV STUDY Areas with outstandingly significant or critically important ecological, social or cultural value. HCS STUDY Areas that contain high above-ground biomass/vegetati on cover, meaning it stores a large amount of carbon. PEATLAND MANAGEMENT Peat experts assessment and recommendation s for best practice management. SOCIAL MANAGEMENT FPIC for new developments, social mapping for responsible conflict resolution. GROWTH AND YIELD Assessing current and potential plantation yield across all suppliers area. Integrated Sustainable Forest Management Plan (ISFMP)

BEFORE & AFTER ISFMP ALL SUPPLIERS MORATORIUM SPATIAL USE HECTARES HECTARES Conservation Forest 383,387 506,126 Production Area 1,642,517 1,499,762 Infrastructure 85,471 - Local Species 230,763 - Livelihood Plantations 140,774 420,524 ISFMP LAND MANAGEMENT CATEGORY Environmental Management Production Social Governance Non-Effective Area 158,518 215,019 Non-Effective TOTAL 2,641,431 2,641,431

Forest Protection: Involving the Communities

LOCAL COMMUNITIES & SOCIAL CONFLICT Local communities continue to be key stakeholders in the Indonesian landscape. They can potentially play the role in either protecting or threatening the environment, depending on their daily routines and livelihood activities. Among the threats posed include encroachment, illegal logging and the risk of fires. To mitigate the threats as well as to include local communities in APP s initiative to protect and rehabilitate natural forests, the Integrated Forestry and Farming System (IFFS) was developed with a USD 10 million from APP. APP has named its IFFS as Desa Makmur Peduli Api (DMPA) in Indonesia and will be implemented in 500 villages in 5 provinces over the next 5 years.

Put People First: the need to put people first in the forest conservation initiatives as they are in the forefront of forest management and among the key drivers of change that will lead to forest sustainability. Good for Climate Change and NDC: trees on agricultural land sequestered close to 0.75 Gigatonnes of carbon dioxide globally per year over the past decade," said World Agroforestry Centre. One of the Big Challenges: It's estimated we're losing 75 billion tons of soil every year. At this rate, the UN estimates that we have 60 years left of farmable topsoil. We need to bring our soil back to life - to optimize delivery of nutrients to plants, hold water in the ground and store carbon in our soils. Community-based IFFS business models need to be developed. And in order to be supported by climate financing, it s key to have scalable and tradeable models.

INTEGRATED FORESTRY AND FARMING SYSTEM Defining village boundaries & their land use to support sustainable livelihoods Village participatory mapping Good communications and relations Improved local economy and food security Support economic activites (formal/non) Product marketing partnership DMPA (IFFS) Technology transfer Community participation in Forest Protection & Conservation Communities & stakeholders supporting ISFMP implementation Prevent & resolve land disputes and land use conflicts over forest resources Prevent & solve conflict Community participation in the prevention of forest/peat degradation, e.g. fire, illegal encroachment

INTEGRATED FORESTRY AND FARMING SYSTEM

INTEGRATED FORESTRY AND FARMING SYSTEM No Region 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 1 Jambi 15 17 17 17 17 2 West Kalimantan 5 8 8 8 8 3 East Kalimantan 5 7 6 6 6 4 South Sumatera 20 28 22 22 22 5 Riau 35 60 47 47 47 Total 80 120 100 100 100 As of June 2016, APP and its suppliers have finished the planning and began rolling out of the IFFS program in 35 villages.

VILLAGES SELECTION MUSI BANYUASIN CASE

Pilot Projet 1: Bukit Batu Village in Palembang Location Historical consideration # of households 759 # of farmers households 530 IFFS Program 1st cycle beneficiaries Current community income Projected income increase Outside concession, directly bordering with concession. Medium risk of fire Corn cultivation on 24 hetares of land 24 households (5% of total households) Approx. IDR 2,000,000 (~ USD 153,00) 30% - 50%

Pilot Projet 2: Muara Bengkal Village in Riau Location Historical consideration # of households 185 # of farmers households 148 IFFS Program 1st cycle beneficiaries Current community income Projected income increase Next to concession, part of the village is inside concession Medium risk of conflict Paddy cultivation, holticulture, farming and vocational skill (to support transportation) 54 households (36% of total households) Approx. IDR 900,000 (~ USD 70) In 3 years 50% - 75%

Pilot Projet 3: Sei Selodang Village in Riau Location Historical consideration # of households 344 # of farmers households 275 IFFS Program 1st cycle beneficiaries Current community income Projected income increase Next to concession, part of the village is inside concession Medium risk of fire and encroachment High risk of conflict Holticulture, farming and vocational skill (to support transportation) 61 households (22% of total households) Approx. IDR 1,000,000 (~ USD 77) In 3 years 50% - 75%

IFFS Program in Pictures

The Landscape Approach The 10 Priority landscapes for multi-stakeholders collaboration for forest conservation & sustainable development

T h a n k Y o u