Refining greenhouse gas emission factors for Indonesian peatlands and mangroves to meet ambitious climate targets

Author:

Murdiyarso Daniel12,Swails Erin1,Hergoualc’h Kristell13,Bhomia Rupesh1ORCID,Sasmito Sigit D.145ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Center for International Forestry Research–World Agroforestry, Situgede, Bogor 16115, Indonesia

2. Department of Geophysics and Meteorology, IPB University, Bogor 16680, Indonesia

3. Centre de coopération International en Recherche Agronomique pour le Développement, 34398 Montpellier Cedex 5, France

4. NUS Environmental Research Institute (NERI), National University of Singapore, Singapore 117411, Singapore

5. Centre for Tropical Water and Aquatic Ecosystem Research (TropWATER), College of Science and Engineering, James Cook University, Douglas, QLD 4811, Australia

Abstract

For countries’ emission-reduction efforts under the Paris Agreement to be effective, baseline emission/removals levels and reporting must be as transparent and accurate as possible. For Indonesia, which holds among the largest area of tropical peatlands and mangrove forest in the world, it is particularly important for these high-carbon ecosystems to produce high-accuracy greenhouse gas inventory and to improve national forest reference emissions level/forest reference level. Here, we highlight the opportunity for refining greenhouse gas emission factors (EF) of peatlands and mangroves and describe scientific challenges to support climate policy processes in Indonesia, where 55 to 59% of national emission reduction targets by 2030 depend on mitigation in Forestry and Other Land Use. Based on the stock-difference and flux change approaches, we examine higher-tier EF for drained and rewetted peatland, peatland fires, mangrove conversions, and mangrove on peatland to improve future greenhouse gas flux reporting in Indonesia. We suggest that these refinements will be essential to support Indonesia in achieving Forest and Other Land Use net sink by 2030 and net zero emissions targets by 2060 or earlier.

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Reference58 articles.

1. IPCC “2006 IPCC guidelines for national greenhouse gas inventories” (Cambridge University Press Cambridge 2006).

2. Coastal vegetation and estuaries are collectively a greenhouse gas sink

3. Anthropogenic impacts on lowland tropical peatland biogeochemistry

4. Global declines in human‐driven mangrove loss

5. IPCC “2013 supplement to the 2006 IPCC guidelines for national greenhouse gas inventories: Wetlands: Methodological guidance on lands with wet and drained soils and constructed wetlands for wastewater treatment” (IPCC Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Geneva Switzerland 2014).

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