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Southeast Asian nations brace for worse haze
An annual haze over Southeast Asia caused by forest fires in Indonesia is expected to worsen this year due to changing weather patterns, the region's environment ministers warned yesterday.
Kuala Lumpur: An annual haze over Southeast Asia caused by forest fires in Indonesia is expected to worsen this year due to changing weather patterns, the region's environment ministers warned yesterday.
The ministers noted that Indonesia's anti-pollution efforts and wetter weather conditions caused by the La Nina phenomenon - the abnormal cooling of sea temperatures in the Pacific Ocean - had helped suppress the haze problem last year.
But the effects of La Nina will wear off by the third quarter this year, the ministers from Malaysia, Indonesia, Brunei, Singapore and Thailand said in a joint statement after a meeting to discuss anti-haze measures.
"This could lead to drier periods and the possibility of escalating hotspot activities during the coming dry season," the statement said.
Malaysia, Singapore and Thailand have complained since 1997 about haze drifting from Indonesia, where annual fires are started as part of seasonal land-clearing especially on Sumatra island and in Kalimantan on Borneo island.
The smog causes health problems and losses amounting to billions of dollars from lost tourism revenue and flight delays, among other things.
Indonesia argues it lacks the money and technical expertise to prevent or control the fires in the vast archipelago nation.
Indonesian Environment Minister Rachmat Witoelar told reporters that efforts are under way to fight cross-border smoke by banning traditional slash-and-burn practices by farmers, timber firms and plantations, and stiffer penalties for open burning.
Indonesia's government agencies and the private sector have also raised their budget for forest fire control this year, he said.
Under a pact to be signed in June, Malaysia will help Indonesia set up an early warning system on forest fires, boost peat land management and strengthen zero burning policies in Riau in northern Sumatra.
Singapore has already committed S$1 million ($724,000; Dh2.6 million) to develop a fire danger rating system and build resources in Jambi in Sumatra, officials said.
However, Indonesia has yet to ratify a 2002 regional agreement on controlling cross-boundary haze, setting back efforts to create a regional coordinating centre to mobilise resources to fight the fire.
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