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Forest fire haze disrupts air traffic in Indonesia's Sumatra: official

Heavy deforestation in Indonesia, including through forest burning, has helped make the country one of the world's largest greenhouse gas emitters.
by Staff Writers
Jakarta (AFP) Feb 17, 2009
Thick haze from forest fires on Indonesia's Sumatra island blanketed the sky and disrupted air traffic in Riau province Tuesday, an airport official said.

"Four planes to (provincial capital) Pekanbaru airport have been diverted this morning to nearby airports on Sumatra due to the thick haze," airport manager Dedi Suryana told AFP.

He said the haze -- a recurring problem that also affects neighbouring countries -- had hampered visibility since early Tuesday.

"We closed the airport at 08:00 am (0100 GMT) as we only had visibility of about 500 metres (yards)," he said, adding that at least 1,000 metres of visibility was needed to safely run flights in and out of the airport.

An official at the forestry ministry who is monitoring the forest fires via satellite, Dedi Haryanto, told AFP 102 hotspots were detected on Monday compared with only 16 the day before.

He said most of the hotspots recorded were from slash-and-burn land clearing by local residents and the rest were from similar clearing for commercial plantations.

Heavy deforestation in Indonesia, including through forest burning, has helped make the country one of the world's largest greenhouse gas emitters.

Riau province in the centre of Sumatra island has massive but dwindling areas of peatland forest, which are deep swamps of semi-decomposed vegetation that are major stores of carbon and release massive amounts of greenhouse gases when burned or cleared.

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Australia counts cost of fires, floods
Sydney (AFP) Feb 16, 2009
Australia Monday began counting the economic cost of wild weather this month which left the northeast under water and the southeast in flames.







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