Menu Content/Inhalt
        Search by country
        
 Currently 108 countries
                 
  
   
Document sans titre

Islet in the terraced rice fields of Bali, Indonesia (8°22’ S, 115°08’ E).Algaculture in Bali, Indonesia (8°42’ S, 115°27’ E).Gathering seaweed, Bali, Indonesia (8°17’ S, 115°06’ E).
Banda Aceh after the tsunami of December 26, 2004, Sumatra, Indonesia (5°32’ N, 95°19’ E).The ruins of Meulaboh after the tsunami, Sumatra Island, Indonesia (4°00’ N, 96°00’ E).Banda Aceh, Lhok Nga mosque after the tsunami of December 26, 2004, Sumatra, Indonesia (5°33’ N, 95°18’ E).
Isolated tree in a eucalyptus plantation, Indonesia (1°54’ S, 112°29’ E).New oil palm plantations near Pundu, Borneo, Indonesia (1°59’ S, 113°06’ E).Oil palm plantation, Borneo, Indonesia (1°13’ S, 113°36’ E).
Village on silts near Pundu, Borneo, Indonesia (1°49’ S, 113°16’ E).Deforestation in Borneo, Indonesia (1°06’ S, 113°39’ E).Floating houses near Pundu, Borneo, Indonesia (1°49’ S, 113°16’ E).
Gold mining, borneo, Indonesia (1°32’ S, 113°05’ E).Gold mining, borneo, Indonesia (1°32’ S, 113°05’ E).New oil palm plantation, near Pundu, Borneo, Indonesia (1°59’ S, 113°06’ E).
Deforestation for oil palm plantation, near Pundu, Borneo, Indonesia (1°59’ S, 113°06’ E).Raja Ampat Islands - Trees uprooted on Wai Island, West Papua province, Indonesia (0°41’ S, 130°25’ E).Raja Ampat Islands (Four Kings), West Papua province, Indonesia (0°41’ S, 130°25’ E).
Raja Ampat Islands (Four Kings), West Papua province, Indonesia (0°41’ S, 130°25’ E).Raja Ampat Islands (Four Kings), West Papua province, Indonesia (0°41’ S, 130°25’ E).Raja Ampat Islands (Four Kings), West Papua province, Indonesia (0°41’ S, 130°25’ E).
Raja Ampat Islands (Four Kings), West Papua province, Indonesia (0°41’ S, 130°25’ E).Raja Ampat Islands (Four Kings), West Papua province, Indonesia (0°41’ S, 130°25’ E).Raja Ampat Islands (Four Kings), West Papua province, Indonesia (0°41’ S, 130°25’ E).
Raja Ampat Islands (Four Kings), West Papua province, Indonesia (0°41’ S, 130°25’ E).Raja Ampat Islands: Waigeo Island, Kabui Bay, West Papua province, Indonesia (0°18’ S, 130°37’ E).Raja Ampat Islands (Four Kings), West Papua province, Indonesia (0°41’ S, 130°25’ E).




Isolated tree in a eucalyptus plantation, Indonesia (1°54’ S, 112°29’ E).

In 1950, Indonesia’s primary forests covered 160 million hectares. Today, they only cover 48 million hectares. Forest exploitation started expanding in the 1970s. Eucalyptus plantations, then palm oil plantations replaced the natural forest. Since 1992, a law has authorized clear cutting within a 100 km radius around a pulp factory to create fast-growing tree plantations, including eucalyptus, an essence especially used by the paper industry. This has accelerated the original forest’s disappearance. Indonesia owns about 80% of Southeast Asia’s last primary tropical rainforests. Every year, about 1.5 million hectares of forest disappear. A large part disappears illegally. According to the United Nations Environment Program, 37 of the 41 Indonesian national parks were victims of wood smuggling. Indonesian forests, Borneo Island in particular, are home to rare species of plants, birds and mammals including orang-utans. These big ginger monkeys only live on the islands of Sumatra and Borneo. There were about 180.000 at the end of the 1980s. Today, there are only between 30.000 and 50.000 of them left. Orang-utans are on the IUCN Red List of Threatened Species. If deforestation continues at the current rate, 98% of Borneo’s original tropical forests will disappear by 2022.

Visit the YAB Gallery for books and signed prints

DatsoGallery Multilingual
By Andrey Datso
Discover the others
Yann Athus-Bertrand's projects
          

All photographs displayed on this website are for personal use only. All rights reserved Yann Arthus-Bertrand ©2013 yannarthusbertrand2.org