Peat soil, made up of partially decomposed, wet plant
material that forms over thousands of years, is highly concentrated in Indonesia
and Malaysia. Peatland in these countries has become a common target for
agricultural expansion, particularly for oil palm, as fertile land becomes
increasingly scarce. When land is cleared for plantations, the underlying peat
needs to be drained, releasing CO2 into the atmosphere.
In fact, the estimated annual emissions from peat drainage
in Indonesia and Malaysia—the world’s two largest sources of tropical
peat—equate to emissions from nearly 70 coal plants, or the total annual
emissions of Vietnam.
Indonesia and Malaysia are among the world’s major emitters
(6th and 19th respectively). But their contributions to global emissions may be
even worse than we think as most estimates of emissions from land use and land
use change leave out those from drained peatland.
Read the World
Resources Institute story - “Destruction of Tropical Peatland Is an Overlooked Source of Emissions.”
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