ASB Open Science Meeting on Tropical Forests and Water
Wednesday, 8 December 2004
Amazon Room, CIFOR Campus
Bogor, West Java, Indonesia
Chair: Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
Rapporteur: Changbo Bai, Earth Negotiations Bulletin
» Agenda
Download: full
content (15 kB in PDF)
» Opening [by official from
Indonesia's Ministry of Forestry]
Download: full
content (26 kB in WORD)
» Future
water demand and regional supply/demand scenarios.
Daniel Murdiyarso, Center for International Forestry Research
(CIFOR), Bogor, Indonesia
Download: full
content (1,476 kB in Zipped PPT)
» Links
between rainforests and water supply: strange but true?
Tom Tomich, Global Coordinator, Alternatives to Slash-and-Burn
(ASB) Programme, World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF), Nairobi,
Kenya
Download: full
content
(204 kB in Zipped PPT)
» Bridging between local, policy
and modellers' perceptions of trees, forests and watershed
functions.
Meine
van Noordwijk, SE Asia Regional Coordinator, World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF),
Bogor, with Laxman Joshi & Horst Weyerhaeuser
Download: full
content (39,518 kB in Zipped PPT), full
content with compressed images (5,277 kB in PDF)
» Hydrological effects of reforestation.
Albert van Dijk, CSIRO Land and Water Programme, Canberra,
Australia, with Sampurno Bruijnzeel, Free University, Amsterdam, the
Netherlands
Download: full
content (35,735 kB in Zipped PPT), full
content with compressed images (11,629 kB in Zipped PPT)
» Does
deforestation affect river flows across the Mekong Basin?
Jeff Richey, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington,
USA
Download: full
content (10,306 kB in Zipped PPT), full
content with compressed images (1,742 kB in PDF)
» Empowerment through measurement: local monitoring, science, and
conflict management in Thailand.
David Thomas,
World Agroforestry Centre (ICRAF), Chiang Mai, Thailand, with Pornchai
Preechapanya, Royal Forest Department, Thailand
Download:
full
content (82,497 kB in Zipped PPT),
full content with compressed images (8,888 kB in PDF)
» Sumber
Jaya (Lampung, Indonesia): from conflict to sustainable land use.
Fahmuddin Agus, Centre of Soil and Agro-Climate Research
(CSAR), Bogor, Indonesia with Gamal Pasya (BaPeDa Lampung/ICRAF), Suyanto
(ICRAF) and Bruno Verbist (KU Leuven, Belgium)
Download:
full
content (22,994 kB in Zipped PPT), full
content with compressed images (3,455 kB in PDF)
» Panel
discussion by policymakers and researchers on three topics:
> 'Kebun lindung' or 'protective gardens' and the existing regulatory framework
view 1: 'Protective gardens' can fulfill all the watershed functions that the public expects from 'protection forest', while allowing farmers to make a living
view 2: Maintaining substantial areas with forest without human interference is essential for watershed functions
> National reforestation programs such as GNRHL in Indonesia
view 1: National reforestation programs for critical watersheds are necessary to reverse the current negative trends; they require good planning and control
view 2: Support for local initiatives of farmers planting the trees they want on the places they like with a clear prospect of future direct benefits is more effective
> Payments for environmental services or focus on tenurial security?
view 1: Direct payments for watershed protection is a cost effective alternative to a regulation-based approach
view 2: What upland poor need primarily is security of tenure, watershed functions are likely to follow from there
» Closing