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- <text id=89TT1766>
- <title>
- July 10, 1989: Putting The Heat On Japan
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Endangered Earth Updates
- July 10, 1989 You Bet Your Life:Pete Rose
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENVIRONMENT, Page 50
- Putting the Heat on Japan
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Accused of ravaging the world's forests and seas, Tokyo starts
- to clean up its act
- </p>
- <p>By Eugene Linden/Tokyo
- </p>
- <p> The Penan, an aboriginal tribe of hunters and gatherers on
- the island of Borneo, are a people under siege. They have
- watched in horror as logging companies inexorably cut down the
- forests that supply the tribe with food, medicines and even the
- poison for blowgun darts used to kill monkeys and hornbill.
- Outraged at seeing their way of life destroyed, the Penan have
- periodically blockaded roads leading into the forest in a losing
- effort to keep the loggers out. Says Penan headman Asik Nyelit,
- who has twice been arrested by Malaysian authorities for his
- role in the blockades: "If we just sit, we are going to die."
- </p>
- <p> While the Penan are fighting the local loggers, the tribe's
- real antagonists are some 2,600 miles away, in Japan. Most of
- the trees cut in the Malaysian part of Borneo (the rest of the
- island is controlled by Indonesia and Brunei) are shipped to
- Japan, where the lumber is most often made into throwaway
- plywood construction forms used to mold concrete. Nor is the
- situation in Borneo unusual. Japan's heavy demand for wood has
- led to the deforestation of vast tracts in Thailand, Indonesia,
- the Philippines and Papua New Guinea. Last April the Japan
- Tropical Forest Action Network, a small but feisty environmental
- group based in Tokyo, presented the giant Marubeni Corp., one
- of the world's largest importers of tropical hardwoods, with a
- mock award: a cardboard chain saw for winning the Grand Prix for
- Tropical Forest Destruction.
- </p>
- <p> The lumber business is only one of many Japanese industries
- that have had far-reaching impact on the global environment. A
- combination of traditional crafts and consumer tastes for the
- exotic makes Japan the world's largest market for many
- threatened species and the products created from them. Over the
- years, elephants by the thousands have been slaughtered so that
- their ivory can be used, for example, in Japanese signature
- seals, and wedding ornaments are fashioned from the shells of
- endangered hawksbill turtles. Japanese fishermen have drawn
- impassioned criticism for their use of huge drift nets across
- vast expanses of the Pacific. The nets, which are up to 40 miles
- wide, are intended to catch squid and tuna, but also entangle
- many other kinds of fish as well as seabirds and marine mammals.
- Roger McManus, president of the Washington-based Center for
- Marine Conservation, has gone so far as to call the Japanese
- "environmental terrorists."
- </p>
- <p> That charge may be unfair, but it indicates the rising
- anger toward the Japanese. Until recently, environmentalists
- focused most of their attention on the U.S. and Western Europe,
- which are far and away the biggest polluters in the free world.
- But as Japan has developed into a leading economic power, its
- impact on the global environment has come under more intense
- scrutiny. While Japan has begun to clean up domestic pollution
- problems, it has not shown the same regard for nature outside
- the home islands.
- </p>
- <p> The country, however, is now beginning to respond to
- complaints from abroad, even though its own environmental
- movement is still tiny by Western standards. Last month the
- Japanese government imposed new curbs on ivory imports,
- surprising and delighting environmentalists worldwide, who fear
- that the African elephant faces extinction in the wild. Japan
- is also preparing a new multibillion-yen program of
- environmental aid for developing countries. Government insiders
- promise the new emphasis on the environment will bring results.
- "Once Japan decides to do something, it can move very quickly,"
- says Takashi Kosugi, a Diet member and the leading
- environmentalist in the ruling Liberal Democratic Party.
- </p>
- <p> The question is whether the policy shifts signify genuine
- change or skillful public relations. Tom Milliken, who heads
- TRAFFIC (Japan), part of the international organization that
- monitors the wildlife trade, gives Japan measured praise for
- its attempts to control commerce in endangered species. Says he:
- "Japan has gone from being the worst of the worst to being on
- a par with the worst of the European countries--Italy and
- France." But on the issues of tropical logging and drift-net
- fishing, environmentalists are much more skeptical. Observes
- Japan's Yoichi Kuroda, co-author of a study titled Timber from
- the South Seas: "The government is simply talking about the rain
- forests. There is no plan and no thought to regulate the timber
- trade."
- </p>
- <p> Tropical-forest destruction has become an urgent
- international issue because, as scientists point out, if the
- trees go, millions of different animal and plant species will
- become extinct, and the information encoded in their genes will
- be lost forever. Moreover, deforestation can lead to local
- disruptions of rainfall patterns and possibly even global
- climate changes because there would be fewer trees to absorb
- carbon dioxide from the air.
- </p>
- <p> Logging is only one cause of deforestation, but in
- Southeast Asia it is an important one. And Japan is the world's
- largest consumer of tropical timber: in 1986 it imported 15.7
- million cubic meters, approximately equal to the imports of the
- entire European Community. Tokyo has begun to finance programs
- aimed at replanting trees in Southeast Asia but has not yet
- tried to limit wood imports.
- </p>
- <p> Nearly 90% of the lumber now comes from Sarawak and Sabah,
- the two Malaysian states on Borneo. On paper at least, Malaysia,
- a well-off country with a relatively small population (17.4
- million), has a model plan for the "sustainable development" of
- its forests. The reality is that neither the overall plan nor
- specific regulations have had much impact, and logging
- operations continue essentially uncontrolled. "In theory
- everything is fine," says S.C. Chin, a Malaysian forestry
- expert. "But 20 years ago, Thailand and the Philippines said
- everything was fine too, and now they have largely been
- stripped."
- </p>
- <p> Environmentalists fear that the same thing will happen in
- Sarawak and Sabah, which contain some of the oldest rain
- forests on earth. Chin estimates that careless, wholesale
- cutting will denude the remaining forests of their commercial
- timber within as little as seven years. Local officials have
- given loggers access to an estimated 95% of Sarawak's forests
- that are outside existing or proposed parks and protected areas.
- Even those tracts are coveted by corrupt politicians. According
- to Harrison Ngau, a Sarawak native being held under house arrest
- for taking part in antilogging protests, some forests have been
- excised from protected lands to open them up to the lumbermen.
- </p>
- <p> Many of the tribal blockades have been set up on the
- Limbang road, which is one of the main logging arteries in
- Sarawak. Construction of the road during the mid-1980s was
- partly financed with a 200 million yen ($842,000) low-interest
- loan from the Japan International Cooperation Agency ostensibly
- to benefit the very people who are today fighting the logging
- traffic. Since JICA is not supposed to give funds to support
- Japanese commercial ventures abroad, the road has provided
- ammunition for those who argue that increased foreign aid by the
- Japanese will only further jeopardize the global environment.
- Kiyoshi Kato, director of JICA's Institute for International
- Cooperation, admits that his agency has learned a lesson from
- the Limbang road: "We must survey local opinion more thoroughly
- before starting future projects."
- </p>
- <p> Many conservationists are worried that Japan will try to
- hide its financing of projects that damage the environment. One
- method would be to make unrestricted loans to foreign banks. The
- banks could then lend money to controversial projects, but Japan
- would not be blamed. One fear is that Japan will use such
- "two-step" loans to fund a major road that would open up the
- western Amazon to logging. Says Alex Hittle, international
- coordinator of Friends of the Earth, U.S.: "It's in general
- loans that disturbing things might be lurking."
- </p>
- <p> Environmentalists give Japan its highest marks for its
- turnaround on trade in endangered species, but they question
- whether the new reforms are too little and too late. While
- Japan has greatly reduced its whaling, whale lovers are
- concerned that the country still kills hundreds of minke whales
- for "scientific research." The Japanese feel maligned by the
- West on the whaling issue, since they view cetaceans as food the
- way Americans see cattle.
- </p>
- <p> For the moment, the slaughter of African elephants by
- poachers has pushed the whales' plight from the headlines, and
- in the case of the ivory trade, Japan has a better record of
- reform. In the mid-1980s, Japan accounted for as much as 70% of
- the final market for ivory products. In 1983 and 1984 alone,
- more than 135,000 elephant tusks were imported, mostly to be
- carved into signature seals called hanko. Then, as international
- complaints about the ivory trade mounted, Japan's dealers
- reversed their aggressive import policies. By 1988 ivory imports
- had been reduced by 75% from the peak years.
- </p>
- <p> Unfortunately, the Japanese ivory traders delayed too long.
- Unrelenting poaching has cut Africa's wild elephant population
- by more than half in the past decade, to an estimated 625,000.
- In October the 102 nations that subscribe to the Convention on
- International Trade in Endangered Species are expected to
- declare the African elephant endangered, which would make the
- ivory trade illegal in those countries. Not waiting for a
- worldwide ban, the U.S. and the E.C. decided last month to stop
- ivory imports immediately. Japan followed suit with a partial
- ban that would reduce its ivory imports to a trickle.
- </p>
- <p> This action shows how much Japan has changed its policies
- concerning threatened animals. As recently as 1987, the country
- had partly exempted itself from the CITES treaty in order to
- maintain imports of 14 endangered species, more than any other
- nation. Since then, Japan has reduced this number to eleven by
- agreeing to ban trade in the green sea turtle, musk deer and
- desert monitor lizard.
- </p>
- <p> Such changes have been slow in coming, in part because
- responsibility for controlling the trade in endangered species
- rests with the Ministry of International Trade and Industry,
- which is also charged with protecting and promoting Japanese
- commercial interests. For instance, MITI delayed limiting
- imports of endangered hawksbill turtles because the agency did
- not want to allocate quotas among different industries that used
- the shells. Finally, with both the turtles and the
- turtle-consuming industries facing extinction, MITI has taken
- the small step of limiting imports to traditional craftsmen who
- carve the carapaces into traditional hair combs. Says Toru
- Takimoto, MITI's point man on endangered species: "There is a
- dawning realization that we must protect these animals for the
- industries to survive."
- </p>
- <p> Japanese timidity about interfering with domestic
- industries is perhaps most pronounced when it comes to fishing,
- which provides a staple of the country's diet. Japan is
- currently embroiled in a dispute with the U.S. and several
- Pacific nations about the charge that the Japanese squid
- fishermen inflict untold damage on marine life with their drift
- nets. Taiwan and South Korea also have extensive drift-net
- operations, but Japan's are the largest. And though U.S.
- fishermen, as the Japanese are quick to point out, use drift
- nets, they tend to be much smaller than the Asian variety.
- </p>
- <p> Sam LaBudde, a biologist with Earthtrust, a Honolulu-based
- wildlife protection group, describes drift nets as "the single
- most destructive fishing technology ever devised by man." Drift
- nets work by entangling sea life in their nylon mesh. Ships
- later reel in the nets, taking out the squid or fish and
- discarding unlucky marine bystanders. It is like hunting for
- deer by poisoning every animal in the forest.
- </p>
- <p> In addition to enraging environmentalists, the drift
- netters have drawn protests from commercial fishermen around the
- world. Americans and Soviets complain that the nets kill large
- numbers of sea trout and salmon, a charge the Japanese deny.
- Australia and New Zealand, concerned that Japanese and other
- Asian fishermen were catching too many albacore tuna in the
- South Pacific, recently outlawed drift nets within 200 miles of
- their shores. The two countries have offered the services of
- their navies to smaller Pacific nations that support the ban.
- </p>
- <p> Given their history, it is surprising that the Japanese
- should be branded environmental outlaws. Although the nation
- embraced Western materialism in this century, one of the
- strongest threads in its more than 2,000 years of cultural
- traditions has always been a deep love of nature. Typical is the
- story of the monk Ryokan who slept under mosquito netting in the
- summer not to prevent being bitten by an insect but to avoid
- squashing one inadvertently while he slept. The Japanese,
- though, have never been passive conservationists. Consider the
- bonsai, the tiny trees that are shaped over generations into
- living pieces of sculpture. The bonsai represent the landscape
- architect's respect for nature, but also the notion that nature
- is at its best when shaped by the hand of man.
- </p>
- <p> Perhaps indicative of modern Japanese attitudes is a
- question posed by a member of the Japanese contingent to a
- Smithsonian Institution symposium on the ethics of whaling. The
- representative asked how a whale differed from a mosquito, not
- to argue that both should receive protection but that both are
- expendable. "The Japanese don't seem to accept the concept of
- sustainable development," contends conservationist McManus,
- "(the idea) that there can be a middle ground between total
- exploitation or total protection."
- </p>
- <p> Still, there are many heartening signs of change in Japan.
- Miwako Kurosaka, a longtime environmental activist, says with
- some awe that she has been invited to address a prestigious
- Keizaikai study group for senior executives that ordinarily
- devotes its sessions to business and politics. Diet member
- Kosugi points out that meetings of his environmental
- subcommittee, which used to draw five or six legislators to a
- small room, now draw 40 or more, forcing a move to larger
- quarters.
- </p>
- <p> If anything will hold back progress, it will be Japan's
- lack of environmental activists and experts. Only about 15,000
- Japanese--most of them bird watchers--belong to conservation
- groups, and the country does not have an extensive network of
- environmentalists, like those who monitor policies in the U.S.
- and Western Europe. The government's foreign aid programs, which
- can have a major effect on the global environment, are
- administered by roughly the same number of people who ran them
- when they were giving out one-tenth as much money.
- </p>
- <p> Yet Japan has shown the capacity to deal forcefully with
- problems when the national will is clear and strong. When the
- people became alarmed in the 1970s about the dangers that air
- pollution and toxic wastes pose to human health, Japan
- developed antipollution policies and technologies that in many
- cases surpass U.S. standards. The country's extensive program
- of garbage recycling is a model for all industrial nations. If
- Japan decides to guard the environment around the world with
- this kind of care, then the island nation might turn its critics
- into admirers.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-