// Global Analysis Archive
The source argues that Sumatra’s November 2025 floods became a national catastrophe due to long-term forest and watershed degradation alongside regulatory and licensing choices that accelerated land conversion. It also highlights contested emergency management decisions and rising public anger over uneven aid, transparency concerns, and tightening civic space amid protests.
The source argues that Sumatra’s late-2025 flash floods reflect long-term watershed degradation driven by forestry governance incentives, not weather alone. It frames climate change as a threat multiplier and calls for upstream accountability, integrated land-use planning, and stronger community forest management to reduce future disaster risk.
The source argues that Sumatra’s November 2025 floods became a national catastrophe due to long-term forest and watershed degradation alongside regulatory and licensing choices that accelerated land conversion. It also highlights contested emergency management decisions and rising public anger over uneven aid, transparency concerns, and tightening civic space amid protests.
The source argues that Sumatra’s late-2025 flash floods reflect long-term watershed degradation driven by forestry governance incentives, not weather alone. It frames climate change as a threat multiplier and calls for upstream accountability, integrated land-use planning, and stronger community forest management to reduce future disaster risk.
| ID | Title | Category | Date | Views | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RPT-4965 | Sumatra Floods: Land-Use Policy, Licensing Incentives, and a Growing Governance Stress Test | Indonesia | 2025-10-21 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-833 | Sumatra Floods: How Forestry Governance Choices Amplify Climate-Driven Risk | Indonesia | 2025-08-28 | 0 | ACCESS » |