• The strategic collaboration with IUCN will advance conservation science and benefit the company’s conservation programmes.
  • Businesses are “expected to move beyond pledges and deliver,” said Anderson Tanoto, RGE Managing Director.
  • Company business and sustainability leaders presented APRIL’s on-the-ground conservation experience at the IUCN World Conservation Congress in Abu Dhabi.

five-year strategic collaboration with the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) aimed at strengthening conservation science and applying evidence-based solutions.

Announced at the IUCN World Conservation Congress in Abu Dhabi, the collaboration will combine APRIL’s operational reach in Indonesia and IUCN’s global scientific expertise, and will help the company to expand its use of conservation tools in the natural landscapes it manages – around 465,000 hectares in total.

The collaboration is also intended to advance robust conservation science and build capacity that supports national and international biodiversity goals.

Anderson Tanoto, Managing Director at RGE and member of the Executive Committee at APRIL, said the company’s approach to conservation was focused on practical action, rather than aspirational targets. “Businesses today are expected to move beyond pledges and deliver results that are credible, practical and measurable on the ground,” he said.

“By combining global science with local action, this partnership enhances our conservation and restoration programmes and engages a wider network of experts and stakeholders to achieve meaningful biodiversity outcomes.”

Leading from the landscape

The IUCN World Conservation Congress also saw a number of APRIL and RGE senior business and sustainability leaders sharing presentations about APRIL’s approach and lessons from implementation on the ground.

APRIL Group Chairman, Bey Soo Khiang, addressed a session on how to scale successful conservation initiatives. This is a pressing problem because although around two thirds of conservation initiatives globally are effective at halting or even reversing biodiversity loss, animals and plant populations are still declining globally. Nearly three quarters of wildlife populations have been lost since the 1970s.

svg+xml;charset=utf — APRIL Asia

Bey Soo Khiang, Chairman APRIL Group, speaking during the plenary session at the IUCN World Conservation Congress

Bey explained how APRIL’s Production-Protection approach, where the company’s conservation areas benefit from the physical protection provided by being surrounded by a ring of plantation,  means encroachment by people who might conduct illegal logging or wildlife poaching is much harder.

He noted that the company’s protection is also financial. For every tonne of plantation wood delivered to the company’s mill site, APRIL sets aside one dollar for its conservation fund, with US$14.8 million allocated in 2024. This finances its own conservation work, but has also been used to support other conservation projects in financial distress.

“We have built resilience in terms of protecting our own conservation area as well as trying to apply this concept of Production-Protection to scale up conservation beyond our concessions,” said Bey.

Lucita Jasmin, RGE’s Group Director of Sustainability, emphasised that effective sustainability and nature conservation strategies must be anchored in purpose, endorsed by the Board and management, and embedded in operations, rather than treated as parallel initiatives. Close collaboration between sustainability and operational teams is critical to translate these strategies into measurable outcomes on the ground.

“Delivery gives you integrity and transparency gives you trust. We believe that progress in sustainability is not built on dramatic gestures, but on consistent work on the ground that makes a real difference,” Jasmin conveyed in a session on ‘The Business Case for Nature.’

A commitment to doing

Congress attendees got a description of what the APRIL’s conservation commitment looks like on the ground. “We’re involved in conservation, because we can be. We have the financial resources to do it,” APRIL’s Director of Sustainability, Craig Tribolet told a session on conservation partnerships between local communities and the private sector.

But he added that the company also has the advantage that it can invest and learn as it progresses, in a way that the public sector can’t always do.

svg+xml;charset=utf — APRIL Asia

Craig Tribolet, Director of Sustainability and External Affairs, APRIL Group, speaking at the IUCN World Conservation Congress

“Because APRIL funds its own investment, it has greater latitude than projects reliant on public funds to adopt a trial an error approach where appropriate to investigate what works,” said Tribolet.

An example of that is APRIL’s Community Conservation scheme where the company is working with local communities to incentivize them to preserve areas of natural forest that they control. The intention is to more than triple the size of the scheme to 100,000 hectares by the end of the decade.

“We will pay for the environmental service of conservation,” said Tribolet, “but we have to be prepared to learn from each other and be prepared to engage with people whose perspectives are going to be very different from ours.”

John Pereira, Deputy Head of Operations at Restorasi Ekosistem Riau (RER), APRIL’s flagship forest conservation project, shared updates on progress achieved over the last decade. The RER project is an area of highly biodiverse peat swamp forest around the size of Greater London that is home to Sumatran tigers and Sunda pangolins among 80 species listed by the IUCN Red List.

In the past year, it has played host to biologists studying the behaviour and ecology of Malayan Sun Bears as well as a separate study on the conservation status of medium to large terrestrial mammals. A multi-year survey of dragonfly and damselfly species (Odonata) found 100 species across 12 families, including five that had previously never been recorded in Indonesia, and one that is entirely new to science.

svg+xml;charset=utf — APRIL Asia
sustainable growth — APRIL Asia

Method

Waste disposed is recorded through various means of measurement including estimation of weight by waste type. Particular waste types as described above are measured as a wet waste and converted to a bone dry (BD) weight. The wet waste weight is multiplied by the consistency of each waste type to determine the BD. The consistency is predetermined by the lab.

Baseline
71kg/T

Performance 2022

On Track

sustainable growth — APRIL Asia

Method

The DPTW utilisation rate and % of textile waste per tonne of product will be based on R&D lab/pilot/demo procedures.

Baseline
0%

Performance 2022

In Development

sustainable growth — APRIL Asia

Method

Water consumption per tonne of product is calculated based on water consumed in the production of saleable pulp, paper, viscose staple fiber and viscose yarn measured by flow meters, via calculation and water balances divided by the production figures for saleable pulp, paper, viscose staple fibre and viscose yarn.

Baseline
28 m3/T

Performance 2022

Not Progressing

sustainable growth — APRIL Asia

Method

Soda content within the liquor cycle and losses are determined by means of mass balance based on daily lab analysis.

Lime volume in the lime kiln and losses are determined by means of lime make-up.

The recovery rate is calculated net of the percentage of make-up amounts added. The annual figure is based on the average monthly recovery rate.

Baseline
96%

Performance 2022

Not Progressing

inclusive progress — APRIL Asia

Method

Number of Mill and Nursery contractor calculated based on Man Power data which grouped by gender level calculated as a monthly average.

Baseline
2571

inclusive progress — APRIL Asia

Method

The number of own and supply partners employees is calculated based on year-end Man Power data which is grouped by gender. The identification of leadership position refer to employees’ grade D2 or Manager level and above.

Baseline
55 women employees in leadership positions

Performance 2022

Progressing

inclusive progress — APRIL Asia

Method

Women’s effective participation is identified from the participation list for each program. Percentage of female participation is calculated by the number of women participating divided by the total participants.

Baseline
34%

Performance 2022

Progressing

inclusive progress — APRIL Asia

Method

In development

Baseline
In development

Performance 2022

Progressing

inclusive progress — APRIL Asia

Method

In development

Baseline
In development

Performance 2022

Progressing

inclusive progress — APRIL Asia

Method

In development

Baseline
In development

Performance 2022

Progressing

inclusive progress — APRIL Asia

Method

We engaged third party to conduct assessment in APRIL-supported schools using the framework that was developed by Research Triangle Institute (RTI) and USAID.

Baseline
In development

Performance 2022

Progressing

inclusive progress — APRIL Asia

Method

Poverty mapping is identified through:

  1. Desktop analysis using National Statistics, Village Potential Statistics, SMERU Poverty Map.
  2. On-the-ground verification through FGD, village transect walk, interview with community.

Baseline
3%

Performance 2022

Progressing

thriving landscapes — APRIL Asia

Method

Peer-reviewed scientific journal publication standards

Baseline
1

Performance 2022

On Track

thriving landscapes — APRIL Asia

Method

Documentation of Participation (presentation of papers or posters) in national and international dialogues, workshops and conferences

Baseline
6

Performance 2022

On Track

thriving landscapes — APRIL Asia

Method

Number of scientists from universities and research institutions that have collaborated with APRIL on peatland management during the calendar year

Baseline
9

Performance 2022

On Track

thriving landscapes — APRIL Asia

Method

Wood deliveries (excluding open market supply) to the mill are used as a basis to calculate MAI (Tonnes/ Ha/Yr). The MAI is based on the 3 year area weighted rolling average growth for all closed compartments.

Baseline
20T/ha/yr

Performance 2022

On Track

thriving landscapes — APRIL Asia

Method

Methodology to be developed specific to animal species and does not include plants. Qualifying initiatives may vary widely in nature but must have the animal protection as the primary objective.

Partnerships will be developed and documented in line with an overarching strategy prioritizing stakeholders and threats specific to the country of Indonesia assessed.

Performance 2022

Progressing

thriving landscapes — APRIL Asia

Method

May include various initiatives relating to conservation of RTE species to be defined in a priority list, initiatives may be conducted solely or in collaboration with other stakeholders.

Baseline
2

thriving landscapes — APRIL Asia

Method

Methodology to be developed to measure change in ecosystem services and values over time (carbon sequestration, water provision, resource provision including fish and honey)

Baseline
not yet developed

thriving landscapes — APRIL Asia

Method

Reports for reforestation of previously encroached and degraded area including all areas where assisted natural regeneration, planting or enrichment planting of species that improve habitat value have taken place during the year but excludes natural regeneration.

Baseline
275 ha

Performance 2022

Progressing

thriving landscapes — APRIL Asia

Method

Area within conservation is derived from land bank which is based on land cover analysis and is updated annually to capture any boundary changes, land use changes or measurement data.

Baseline
0 ha Net loss

Performance 2022

Not Progressing

thriving landscapes — APRIL Asia

Method

Landscape conservation funding includes restoration and conservation costs associated with the RER as well as the allocation of a proportion of the costs related to APRIL’s maintenance of conservation values under its production-protection model. The allocation is based on proportionate amount of each cost that is related to conservation and restoration.

The wood volume is based on wood delivered to the Mill.

Baseline
USD$0.7 per tonne of plantation fiber

Performance 2022

On Track

climate positive 1 — APRIL Asia

Method

Mill

Calculate from the records of fuel types used the amount consumed in boilers to generate power, heat and steam including energy use for mobile & including transportation. Each of the fuel types are converted to energy expressed by Giga Joule Lower Heating Value (GJ LHV) following the IPCC guidelines.

Baseline: 87%

Performance 2022

On Track

Forest Operations

Calculate from the records of fuel types the quantity consumed by major categories of forest management activities by Fiber operations.

This covers energy used for Forest operations, infrastructure including wood transport from estate to mill; When a blend of fuel types is used (such as B20) the contribution to renewable and cleaner energy targets is calculated separately for each fuel rather than considering the blend as a cleaner fuel type.

Baseline: 19%

Performance 2022

Progressing

climate positive 1 — APRIL Asia

Method

APRIL follows the international GHG protocol as developed by WRI/WBCSD to develop its emissions profile. The total emissions measured as emissions intensity is calculated based on tonnes of Scope 1 and 2 Mill Greenhouse Gas Emissions per tonne of product (paper, pulp and viscose). The emissions boundary scope covers gate-to-gate (wood processing in wood yard until pulp, paper and viscose production) of the three main GHGs: CO2, CH4, and N2O.

Baseline
0.55 tCO2e/product tonne

Performance 2022

On Track

climate positive 1 — APRIL Asia

Method

To quantify the total GHG emission and removals across APRIL’s land bank from land use, APRIL follows the GHG Protocol Agricultural Guidance and IPCC Guidelines for Agricultural, Forestry, and Other Land Use. To detect the land cover change within the look-back period, i.e. 20 years APRIL utilized the remotely sensed data.

The GHG emission will be calculated as the total of carbon stock changes in woody biomass and soil organic carbon and include all major carbon fluxes such as peat decomposition, plantation growth and harvesting, and fires.

To quantify the amount of carbon unit to balance the emission, the Verified Carbon Standard (VCS), the Climate, Community and Biodiversity Standards (CCB), or other internationally accepted standard will be used.

Performance 2022

Progressing

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