Title: PEAT, PULP AND PAPER:
1PEAT, PULP AND PAPER Climate Impact of Pulp Tree
Plantations on Peatland in Indonesia
- PROFESSOR JACK RIELEY
- University of Nottingham, UK
- Ramsar Scientific Technical Review Panel
- International Peat Society
- Orang Utan Foundation UK
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3AREA OF PEATLAND IN INDONESIA
Sumatra 8.3 M ha Kalimantan 6.8 M ha West Papua
4.6 M ha
Approximately 50 (20 M ha) of tropical
peatland occurs in Indonesia
A further 2.8 M ha occurs in Peninsular Malaysia
and northern Borneo (Sarawak, Brunei)
4Characteristics of Lowland Peatlands in Southeast
Asia
- Support a natural vegetation of peat swamp
forest. - Acidic, rain-fed, nutrient-poor systems.
- Thick organic layer peat thickness can exceed
10m.
12 m
5Biodiversity
- Tree species recorded from peat swamp forests in
SE Asia - 800 tree species
- 71 families
- 237 genera
- Many display characteristic adaptations to the
habitat, e.g. stilt roots, pneumatophores.
6Biodiversity
- Mammalian fauna
- includes several
- notable species
- orang-utan
- agile gibbon
- sun bear
Pongo pygmaeus pygmaeus
7CARBON SEQUESTRATION AND STORAGE
- In tropical peatlands the vegetation and
underlying peat constitute a large and highly
concentrated carbon store - Estimates of current carbon accumulation rates in
tropical peatlands range from 59-145 g m-2 yr-1
sequestering between 0.060.093 Pg C yr-1 -
- Some peatlands, even in a natural condition, are
in a steady-state and are no longer accumulating
peat, whilst others are undergoing degradation - The peatlands of Kalimantan represent a carbon
store of 13 Pg, those of Indonesia contain 35 Pg
and the global total for tropical peatlands is
estimated to be 54 Pg
8MEGA RICE PROJECTDURING AND AFTER
9FORMER MEGA RICE PROJECT SEPTEMBER 2002
There have been some problems!
10Two years after MRP commenced 1997 El Niño
promoted widespread forest fires
Peatland fires were widespread in Kalimantan and
Sumatra
11Carbon Emissions from Peatland Fires
- Carbon losses from Indonesian peatland fires
during 1997/98 - Estimated 0.81 2.57 Gt C Page et al. 2002
- 55-95 of C emissions from all fires during
that period in SE Asia Schimel Baker 2002
van der Werf et al. 2004, 2006
Annual fire hotspot data for Borneo 1997 to 2006
Langner et al. 2007
12Haze from the forest/peatland fires blankets
much of SE Asia - Sept. 1997(NASA satellite
image)
13Sink to Source
- Carbon storage
- Above-ground 150 - 250 t C ha-1
- Below-ground 250 - gt5,000 t C ha-1
- Carbon sequestration severely impaired by land
use change - 120,000 km2 (45) currently deforested mostly
drained - Large areas impacted by recurrent fires
- Drivers of land use change
- Conversion to plantations (palm oil/Acacia)
- Logging (illegal logging rampant in Indonesia)
- Poor forest and (peat)land management
- Lack of understanding of peatlands and peat
14Modelling Carbon Emissions from Drained Tropical
Peatlands
Current (2005) 355-874 Mt CO2 yr-1 (100240 Mt
C yr-1 ) Projected (2015-2035) 557-981 Mt CO2
yr-1 (150-270 Mt C yr-1 )
- Drainage emissions are equivalent to 1.43.5
of global emissions from fossil fuels
(25,000 Mt CO2 yr-1) -
- Hooijer, Silvius, Wosten Page, 2006
15Carbon Emissions from Drained Peatlands
Oil palm plantation 2.3 m loss 1976-2007
16Improved plantation water management
Reduced emissions/subsidence Linked to
protection of remaining natural forest
17Reducing the contribution tropical peatlands make
to C emissions
- Reduce emissions from remaining forests
deforestation avoidance need for baseline
monitoring data - Reduce emissions from degraded peatlands
hydrological restoration and reforestation
pilot studies - Improve understanding of vulnerability of
plantations on peatlands e.g. improved
plantation water management (best practice
examples) - Transfer/disseminate scientific knowledge to
influence public policy-making
18STRATEGIES FOR WISE USE OF TROPICAL PEATLAND IN
INDONESIA
19LIFE CYCLE COMPARISONS ON TROPICAL PEATLAND
- The impact of different land uses on tropical
peatland in Indonesia (oil palm and pulp tree
plantations) on CO2e emissions compared to
natural, peat swamp forest and deforested,
drained and degraded peatland.
20DATA, METHODS AND ASSUMPTIONS
- We use data from both primary and secondary
sources to estimate the likely magnitude of the
inputs to and outputs from tropical peatland
carbon stores under different land uses and the
changes that will take place to these stores over
a period of 25 years representing the average
economic life of an oil palm plantation (Corley
Tinker, 2003). Our focus is on carbon dioxide
(CO2). Methane emissions from tropical peatland
under all land uses is very low (Jauhiainen,
2005, Melling, 2005) while emissions of other
greenhouse active gases, notably NO2, have not
been studied in detail so far and are not
included in this assessment.
21TROPICAL PEAT LAND USE CARBON BUDGETS
(calculated for a 25 year period t C ha-1)
22TROPICAL PEAT LAND USE CARBON BUDGETS
(calculated for a 25 year period t C ha-1)
23ENDWORD
- The four land use scenarios are benchmarked to
specific assumptions and conditions and are
indicative only. For example the major
assumptions of peat thickness of 4.4 m, bulk
density of 0.09 g cm-3 and carbon content of 56
are the best estimates available at present and
are obtained from detailed field sampling and
analysis of peat cores. Of course not all
tropical peat will have exactly these values and
when data from other locations for similarly
long, intact peat cores become available the
model depicted in this paper can be updated. The
comparisons, however, will remain valid.
24Thank you for listening. Time is running out!!
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