4.7 Article

Natural climate solutions in Indonesia: wetlands are the key to achieve Indonesia's national climate commitment

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 17, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/1748-9326/ac9e0a

Keywords

climate change; mitigation potential; peatlands; mangroves; drylands

Funding

  1. NORAD
  2. Bezos Earth Fund [GLO-4251 QZA-16/0172]

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Indonesia has a significant opportunity to combat climate change by utilizing natural climate solutions, particularly through the protection, management, and restoration of wetland ecosystems. This study estimates Indonesia's potential for reducing emissions by implementing natural climate solutions, highlighting the importance of wetlands, especially peatlands, in achieving the country's emissions reduction target by 2030.
Indonesia offers a dramatic opportunity to contribute to tackling climate change by deploying natural climate solutions (NCS), increasing carbon sequestration and storage through the protection, improved management, and restoration of drylands, peatlands, and mangrove ecosystems. Here, we estimate Indonesia's NCS mitigation opportunity for the first time using national datasets. We calculated the maximum NCS mitigation potential extent using datasets of annual national land cover, peat soil, and critical lands. We collated a national emissions factor database for each pathway, calculated from a meta-analysis, recent publications from our team, and available literature. The maximum NCS mitigation potential in 2030 is 1.3 +/- 0.04 GtCO(2)e yr(-1), based on the historical baseline period from 2009-2019. This maximum NCS potential is double Indonesia's nationally determined contribution (NDC) target from the forestry and other land use sector. Of this potential opportunity, 77% comes from wetland ecosystems. Peatlands have the largest NCS mitigation potential (960 +/- 15.4 MtCO(2)e yr(-1) or 71.5 MgCO(2)e ha(-1) yr(-1)) among all other ecosystems. Mangroves provide a smaller total potential (41.1 +/- 1.4 MtCO(2)e yr(-1)) but have a much higher mitigation density (12.2 MgCO(2)e ha(-1) yr(-1)) compared to dryland ecosystems (2.9 MgCO(2)e ha(-1) yr(-1)). Therefore, protecting, managing, and restoring Indonesia's wetlands is key to achieving the country's emissions reduction target by 2030. The results of this study can be used to inform conservation programs and national climate policy to prioritize wetlands and other land sector initiatives to fulfill Indonesia's NDC by 2030, while simultaneously providing additional co-benefits and contributing to COVID-19 recovery and economic sustainability.

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