Science 14Feb2020

(Wang) #1
722 14 FEBRUARY 2020 • VOL 367 ISSUE 6479 sciencemag.org SCIENCE

PHOTO: ULET IFANSASTI/STRINGER/GETTY IMAGES

A

fter living and working in Indonesia
for about 15 years, French landscape
ecologist David Gaveau suddenly left
the country on 28 January. Indone-
sian immigration authorities had
ordered Gaveau, a research associate
with the Center for International Forestry
Research (CIFOR) in Bogor, on Java, to
leave because of a visa violation.
Gaveau, who also directed a small con-
sulting company on Bali, would not com-
ment on the reason for his departure. But
some colleagues suspect it’s no coincidence
that he was expelled the month after CIFOR
published an estimate of the damage from
Indonesia’s 2019 wildfires that far exceeded
the government’s own numbers. Some see
his deportation as another sign of the grow-
ing tension between the Indonesian govern-
ment and the scientific community. In recent
years, several researchers studying environ-
mental damage from development and fires
have faced government pressure and some
have lost their jobs and their right to stay in
the country. Indonesian scientists have felt
pressure as well. “I am afraid these signs
mean the Indonesian government is starting
to leave science behind,” says Herlambang
Wiratraman, director of human rights law
studies at Airlangga University.

Gaveau is an expert on deforestation and
forest fires who runs the Borneo Atlas and
the Papua Atlas, online platforms that track
changes in land use in industry concessions.
In his analysis of the 2019 fires, based on im-
ages captured by the European Space Agen-
cy’s Sentinel-2 satellite and published in early
December 2019, he concluded that about
1.6 million hectares of forest and degraded
peatlands had burned between January and
October in seven Indonesian provinces.
The numbers upset officials at the Min-
istry of Environment and Forestry (KLHK),
whose research division had concluded
that less than 1.2 million hectares burned
in the same provinces between January and
November. They used data from different
satellites, verified with observations on the
ground, says Raffles Panjaitan, director of
the land and forest fires division at KLHK.
Panjaitan told Science in December 2019 that
Gaveau “clearly made a mistake” by failing
to groundtruth his numbers.
In a meeting with KLHK officials on
4 December 2019, Gaveau admitted his find-
ings were preliminary and had to be veri-
fied, Panjaitan says. CIFOR has pulled the
analysis from its website. “CIFOR’s practice
is to submit our research to the scrutiny of
the peer-review process,” says CIFOR Di-
rector Robert Nasi. “In this case, that prac-
tice was not fully adhered to.” In a tweet

about the fires, environment minister Siti
Nurbaya Bakar later said “unobjective and
invalid data must be countered.”
Since then, KLHK has published revised
estimates closer to Gaveau’s analysis, how-
ever. And it’s not unusual for scientists to
come up with different fire estimates, says
Arief Wijaya, a researcher at the World Re-
sources Institute. “Each methodology has
its own strengths and weaknesses,” he says.
“It is very wrong for KLHK to shun an alter-
native viewpoint,” adds biologist Rosichon
Ubaidillah of the Indonesian Institute of
Sciences (LIPI). “They can’t suppress the
science they don’t like.”
Indonesian immigration authorities
did not respond to requests for informa-
tion about Gaveau’s deportation, but Agus
Justianto, head of KLHK’s research division,
says it was unrelated to the December inci-
dent. A science law adopted last year in Indo-
nesia tightly regulates international research
collaborations (Science, 26 July 2019, p. 304),
and Gaveau “didn’t have the right permit to
do research in Indonesia,” Justianto says.
But Gaveau says it’s not clear the new law
covers his work. “I no longer conduct on-the-
ground research in Indonesia,” he says. “I am
a consultant who provides scientific advice
to a range of international and national insti-
tutions based on free satellite data and other
public data sets.” Other foreigners working

By Dyna Rochmyaningsih

SCIENCE AND POLITICS

Scientists in Indonesia fear political interference


IN DEPTH


Estimates of how much
Indonesian forest and
peatland burned in 2019
are politically sensitive.

French researcher is deported after publishing unwelcome data on wildfires


Published by AAAS
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