Permalink: https://media.greenpeace.org/archive/Local-Life-in-Kuala-Cenaku-27MZIFVUURR9.htmlConceptually similarLocal Life in Kuala CenakuGP04KUQCompleted★★★★★★Sivalingam Nandikesh in IndonesiaGP02I6WCompleted★★★★Sivalingam Nandikesh in IndonesiaGP02I6YCompleted★★★★Meeting Locals in IndonesiaGP02I6XCompleted★★★★Meeting Locals in IndonesiaGP02I71Completed★★★★Local People in IndonesiaGP02I7FCompleted★★★★Local People in IndonesiaGP02I7GCompleted★★★★Local Woman in SumatraGP01GPNCompleted★★★★Local Girl in SumatraGP01GPPCompleted★★★★★★★View AllGP04KURLocal Life in Kuala CenakuA woman with her fishing trap on the banks of the Indragiri Hulu river in Kuala Cenaku, Riau.Locations:Indonesia-Kuala Cenaku-Riau-Southeast Asia-SumatraDate:7 May, 2013Credit:© Kemal Jufri / GreenpeaceLatitude:0°27'41.58"SMaximum size:5282px X 3521pxLongitude102°38'42.21"EKeywords:Children-Day-East Asian ethnicities-Fishers-Fishing (activity)-Fishing cages-Fishing equipment-Forests (campaign title)-KWCI (GPI)-Local population-Outdoors-Rivers-Rural scenes-Small-scale fishing-Tropical rainforests-Two people-Unusual angle-WomenShoot:Sumatra Forests DocumentationIn May 2011, President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono signed a decree committing Indonesia to a moratorium on the issuance of new permits in primary forests and peat land. Although this moratorium, renewed in May 2013 for a further two years, leaves around 40 million hectares of forest unprotected, the moratorium is important to help achieve Indonesia’s greenhouse gas emissions reduction goal of 26 percent by 2020. Indonesia is one of the world's largest producers of greenhouse gases, largely owing to the rapid destruction of its forests and peat lands for palm oil and pulp and paper. This shoot includes images of land clearance and deforestation, palm oil plantations, and pulp concessions in Riau, Sumatra.