Plant 1.000.000 Trees in Indonesia Damaged Forest

by Yayasan Lembaga Kajian Pengembangan Pendidikan Sosial Agama dan Kebudayaan (INFEST)
Plant 1.000.000 Trees in Indonesia Damaged Forest
Plant 1.000.000 Trees in Indonesia Damaged Forest
Plant 1.000.000 Trees in Indonesia Damaged Forest
Plant 1.000.000 Trees in Indonesia Damaged Forest
Plant 1.000.000 Trees in Indonesia Damaged Forest
Plant 1.000.000 Trees in Indonesia Damaged Forest
Plant 1.000.000 Trees in Indonesia Damaged Forest
Plant 1.000.000 Trees in Indonesia Damaged Forest
Plant 1.000.000 Trees in Indonesia Damaged Forest
Plant 1.000.000 Trees in Indonesia Damaged Forest
Plant 1.000.000 Trees in Indonesia Damaged Forest
Plant 1.000.000 Trees in Indonesia Damaged Forest
Plant 1.000.000 Trees in Indonesia Damaged Forest
Plant 1.000.000 Trees in Indonesia Damaged Forest
Plant 1.000.000 Trees in Indonesia Damaged Forest
Plant 1.000.000 Trees in Indonesia Damaged Forest
Plant 1.000.000 Trees in Indonesia Damaged Forest
Plant 1.000.000 Trees in Indonesia Damaged Forest
Plant 1.000.000 Trees in Indonesia Damaged Forest
Plant 1.000.000 Trees in Indonesia Damaged Forest
Plant 1.000.000 Trees in Indonesia Damaged Forest
Plant 1.000.000 Trees in Indonesia Damaged Forest

Project Report | Feb 10, 2026
From Monoculture to Diversity: Restoring Forest in Central Java

By Misbachul Munir | Project Staff

The Crisis: A Landscape at the Brink

Java is the most densely populated island in Indonesia, and today, only 19% of its forest cover remains. While primary rainforests are now retreated to the peaks of great mountains like Slamet and Ijen, the vast "Production Forests" in the lowlands face a dire fate.

Since the mass forest encroachments of 1998, regions like Blora, Ngawi, and Blitar have seen their forests transformed into barren agricultural land. Driven by land scarcity and economic desperation, local communities converted these state-owned forests into monoculture fields of corn and sugarcane.

The Ecological Cost:

  • The Sunlight Conflict: Corn and sugarcane require maximum sunlight. This discourages farmers from replanting trees, as shade is seen as a threat to their harvest.

  • Loss of Habitat: These forests were once the sanctuary for Java’s endemic species—the Javan Langur, the Green Peafowl, and various rare birds. Without forest stands, these species face local extinction.

  • Ecological Disaster: Without tree roots to hold the soil and retain water, these regions are ticking time bombs for long-term ecological catastrophes.

 

Our Strategy: Opening the Path to Agroforestry

We believe that forest restoration cannot succeed if it ignores the stomachs of the people living beside it. Our commitment is to restore forest functions while simultaneously securing the community's welfare.

In Blora, we have moved beyond rhetoric to action by implementing Agroforestry as a sustainable middle ground.

Spotlight: The Ngerawoh & Ngambong Model

In Ngerawoh Village, we are working hand-in-hand with the community to create Agroforestry Pilot Plots (Demplot). These plots are a sophisticated blend of:

  • High-Value Shade Crops: Coffee and Aren (Sugar Palm) which provide long-term income.

  • Conservation Trees: Hardwood and water-retaining species that restore the water table.

  • Integrated Husbandry: As seen in Ngrawoh, the introduction of sheep husbandry provides the immediate "economic bridge" needed while waiting for trees to mature.

 

Impact: Creating Habitats, Securing Futures

This approach is a form of Social Engineering. By shifting the economic focus from sun-dependent corn to shade-tolerant coffee and livestock, we are removing the incentive to keep the forest "bald."

  • Restoring Canopy: Farmers are now actively protecting tree saplings because they provide the necessary shade for their coffee plants and fodder for their sheep.

  • Biodiversity Corridors: By restoring cover, we are creating "stepping stones" for endemic fauna to return to the area.

  • Community Policy: We are assisting these villages in designating and managing specific forest zones as protected conservation areas.

 

A Persuasive Closing

We are not just planting trees; we are dismantling a decades-old cycle of deforestation. In the villages of Blora, the community is learning that a standing forest is more valuable than a cleared field. Your support is helping us prove that the Javanese forest can breathe again, and its people can prosper alongside it.

 

Next Steps for Our Donors:

  1. Scaling the Pilot: Expanding the Ngerawoh agroforestry model to three neighboring villages.

  2. Species Monitoring: Initiating a community-based biodiversity survey to track the return of endemic birds and primates.

  3. Infrastructure: Building organic processing units for coffee and sugar palm to increase the "added value" for our local partners.

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Organization Information

Yayasan Lembaga Kajian Pengembangan Pendidikan Sosial Agama dan Kebudayaan (INFEST)

Location: Bantul, Yogyakarta - Indonesia
Website:
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Project Leader:
Irsyadul Ibad
Bantul , Yogyakarta Indonesia
$1,507 raised of $606,000 goal
 
17 donations
$604,493 to go
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