
Adi Renaldi
Multimedia Journalist at Freelance
Rainforest Investigations Fellow at Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting
Southeast Asia Correspondent @TRF @ContextNewsroom🧑💻 📝The Archipelago Dispatch • Byline in dozens outlets around the globe • [email protected]
Articles
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1 month ago |
context.news | Adi Renaldi
A stream in North Morowali Regency on the Indonesian island of Sulawesi on March 13, 2023. Peter Yeung/Thomson Reuters FoundationWhat’s the context? Despite losing most of their customary forest, Ngata Toro Indigenous community in Central Sulawesi still vowed to protect nature.
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1 month ago |
context.news | Adi Renaldi
What’s the context? Indonesia's plans to expand agricultural land to feed a growing population could raze climate-saving peatlands and forest. JAKARTA - Indonesia's government hopes an initiative to turn millions of hectares of land, including forests and peatlands, into farmland will reduce the world's fourth-most populous nation's reliance on food imports to feed a booming population.
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1 month ago |
context.news | Adi Renaldi
A Papuan activist applies soils on her face as a symbol of grief during a protest against deforestation by palm oil companies on their indigenous land in Papua, outside the country's Supreme Court in Jakarta, Indonesia, May 27, 2024. REUTERS/Willy KurniawanWhat’s the context? Indonesia could pass a landmark Indigenous Peoples bill this year after almost two decades in limbo.
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2 months ago |
licas.news | Adi Renaldi
Ahmad Solihin used to can tuna; now he drives a cab. Like many Indonesians, the 28-year-old is a victim of overfishing and climate change, twin forces that have hobbled what was once a thriving industry. The tuna catch is down, retail prices are unreliable and thousands of jobs have gone as the fishing industry takes a hit, with all parts of the sector affected.
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2 months ago |
context.news | Adi Renaldi
What’s the context? Overfishing and climate change have hit the world's fish stock, pushing Indonesian fishing communities into povertyFishing industry loses jobs, boats and profitsWarming seas and overfishing to blameIndonesia seeks to protect dwindling stock with quotasJAKARTA - Ahmad Solihin used to can tuna; now he drives a cab. Like many Indonesians, the 28-year-old is a victim of overfishing and climate change, twin forces that have hobbled what was once a thriving industry.
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