October 26, 2004 edition
THERE was a time when the company, then called PT Inti Indorayon Utama, was branded by the local community as a polluter of the environment. The technology it used in its operation was not environmentally friendly. Today, the company, which has since been renamed PT Toba Pulp Lestari (TPL), is operating with a “new paradigm.” Located at Desa Sosor Ladang, Kecamatan Porsea, in the North Sumatra district of Toba Samosir, it’s now operating under new management with technology that is friendly to the environment—no longer running a rayon-producing facility believed to be the main source of pollution in the area.
THERE was a time when the company, then called PT Inti Indorayon Utama, was branded by the local community as a polluter of the environment. The technology it used in its operation was not environmentally friendly. Today, the company, which has since been renamed PT Toba Pulp Lestari (TPL), is operating with a “new paradigm.” Located at Desa Sosor Ladang, Kecamatan Porsea, in the North Sumatra district of Toba Samosir, it’s now operating under new management with technology that is friendly to the environment—no longer running a rayon-producing facility believed to be the main source of pollution in the area.
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More Intermezzo articles in other editions
October 5, 2004 edition
FOUR centuries ago sailors from Makassar in South Sulawesi landed on Marege on the northern coast of Arnhem Land in what is now Australia’s Northern Territory. The men, braving the seas in their traditional sailboats known as padewakang, came to gather sea cucumbers and in the process associate with the aborigines, binding the culture, language, and tradition of two peoples of different racial and historical origin.
It’s been almost a century since the last padewakang lay anchor off the coast of Arnhem Land in 1907, leaving traces which still can be found on its shores. Tempo’s Endah W.S. visited Arnhem Land last August to record the legacy left by the intrepid sailors from Makassar in Australia and filed this report:
FOUR centuries ago sailors from Makassar in South Sulawesi landed on Marege on the northern coast of Arnhem Land in what is now Australia’s Northern Territory. The men, braving the seas in their traditional sailboats known as padewakang, came to gather sea cucumbers and in the process associate with the aborigines, binding the culture, language, and tradition of two peoples of different racial and historical origin.
It’s been almost a century since the last padewakang lay anchor off the coast of Arnhem Land in 1907, leaving traces which still can be found on its shores. Tempo’s Endah W.S. visited Arnhem Land last August to record the legacy left by the intrepid sailors from Makassar in Australia and filed this report: