Hebron Pintubatu, the middle-aged village head of Dolok Tolong in Dairi
regency, North Sumatra, is fond of reminiscing about the heyday of
Sidikalang coffee.
The famed beans, named after a town in Dairi,
were once the only commodity grown in the village according to
conventional cultivation methods.
“Now Sidikalang coffee
production has considerably declined and we can no longer rely on this
commodity for a living,” Hebron said.
The coffee grower and
member of the Martabe Farmers Group said the 1980s saw the peak of
success for the coffee business in the village. Between 2005 and 2007
coffee prices slumped, forcing many farmers to turn to other crops or to
abandon their plantations. When prices began to stabilize and even rise
in 2007, production was far below expectations — and still is.
Rolinson
Limbong of the farmers’ group said out of the 250 Arabica coffee plants
he had grown, only 35 kilograms were produced in the November/December
harvest last year. In March of this year, the harvest turned out half
the previous quantity.
“We can no longer predict harvest yields
and how much money we will earn so we need additional income,” the
father of two said.
The increasing need to support daily needs
prompted 387 families in seven hamlets of Dolok Tolong to replace
Robusta crops with Arabica.
Although Robusta has better flavor,
it takes a longer time to harvest while the amount of land is limited,
so farmers have chosen to grow the short-term variety by the intercrop
method. Their coffee output is sold to collectors affiliated with
Koperasi Baperda Organik, a regional cooperative.
“Dolok Tolong
can join the cooperative within two years in line with our production
increase,” said Parulian Situmorang, chairman of Martabe. His group has
25 members representing the three hamlets of Dolok Martabe, Pasar Lama
and Aek Nauli.
They are interested in becoming part of the cooperative to avoid pre-harvest sales at low prices, which trap them in poverty.
All
members have joined the field school of Conservation International
Indonesia (CI Indonesia). For eight months they were trained in
appropriate and sustainable coffee cultivation as well as compost
making. They were provided with grinders, compost ingredients and
fertilizer storehouses.
Seedlings were also supplied, which were
cultivated into young eucalyptus, lamtoro, mindi, sengon and ingul
trees that were planted along with coffee bushes.
The concept of
conservation implemented by the Martabe Group has brought them to the
process of certification for sustainable coffee management.
“We’re
carrying out intercropping because coffee grows better under the
protection of trees against direct sunlight and heavy dew.
The trees can also be a source of extra income for us,” said Japen Habeahan, who planted eucalyptus to shade his coffee.
In
June he started growing 1,000 eucalyptus trees at 2.5-meter intervals
on a 1-hectare plot, with a coffee plant placed amid four trees.
“This
is called the five-point method of organic and conservational
cultivation suited to the impact of climate change today,” Japen said.
Trying
to imitate Japan, 30 families from three hamlets in Dolok Tolong, with
the assistance of CI Indonesia, proposed to participate in Community
Forest (HKm) development along with five other villages: Perjuangan,
Pargambiran, Sileu-leu Parsaoran, Barisan Nauli and Tanjung Beringin I
in Sumbul.
The problem was they live around the forest that
serves as a water catchment area for Lake Toba and the hydropower plant
of Lae Renun. The plant depends on forest conservation around the lake
because it guarantees the supply of water to propel power generating
turbines.
Appreciating the villagers’ desire, the Dairi regent
made a request for HKm working areas in Sumbul district to the Forestry
Minister. Sudriyanto from the Wampu-Sei Ular River Basin Management
Agency said his office was cooperating with CI Indonesia and the Dairi
forestry office to communicate the government regulation and policy on
HKm to locals.
Okbertho, head of the Dairi forestry office’s
forest protection division, said a forest zone management scheme to
accommodate the community’s economic interests and forest conservation
in the regency would be needed.
“Facilitated by CI Indonesia,
the Sumbul community proposed two HKm areas to the minister,” he added.
They are 10,800 hectares projected by the Dairi Sustainable Coffee
Farmers Forum and 1,800 hectares by the Conservation Farmers Group.
Dolok Tolong, as one of the six villages in this group, shares 300
hectares.
The two forest locations proposed have mostly been
utilized by the farmers for coffee plantations. “In fact, the forest
zone is important and has the hydrological function of a water catchment
area for the conservation of Lake Toba’s ecosystem,” he said.
According
to Okbertho, coffee farmers want to utilize the forest under the
pattern of agroforestry and payments for environment services in the
context of Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation
(REDD), but their knowledge is very limited.
“The forest areas
requested have generally met the criteria for HKm working areas, leaving
only their verification by a team and the regent’s licensing. We’ve
conducted pre-verification and the license takes a fairly long time to
process, but when the principle permit is issued locals will have a
legal basis to continue,” Okbertho said.
“It’s most important
to strengthen the community’s institutional setup. CI Indonesia supports
farmers’ involvement in forest conservation, among others through
community-based forest management like HKm development. For Sumbul,
coffee cultivation is appropriate because of the district’s majority of
coffee growers,” said Fazrin Rahmadani Sumatra program manager of CI
Indonesia.
“At present Lake Toba’s water flow rate is
drastically declining so that power supply from the Lae Renun generating
plant is limited. Forest conservation and land rehabilitation in the
ecosystem of Lake Toba is thus very crucial,” he said.
Another
opportunity is the Lae Renun power plant’s program to provide Rp 5 in
compensation per KWH for replanting. The greening effort can be
undertaken through environment-oriented agriculture that preserves soil
fertility to retain rainwater for erosion prevention.
“The villagers should rise up to build their own rural land,” Fazrin added.
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