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Economic and social constraints on reforestation for climate mitigation in Southeast Asia

Authors :
Zeng, Y
Sarira, TV
Carrasco, LR
Chong, KY
Friess, DA
Lee, JSH
Taillardat, P
Worthington, TA
Zhang, Y
Koh, LP
Zeng, Y [0000-0001-7787-314X]
Sarira, TV [0000-0001-7643-4647]
Carrasco, LR [0000-0002-2894-1473]
Chong, KY [0000-0003-4754-8957]
Lee, JSH [0000-0001-6368-6212]
Taillardat, P [0000-0003-0195-3690]
Worthington, TA [0000-0002-8138-9075]
Zhang, Y [0000-0001-5195-0258]
Koh, LP [0000-0001-8152-3871]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020.

Abstract

As climate change continues to threaten human and natural systems, the search for cost-effective and practical mitigation solutions is gaining momentum. Reforestation has recently been identified as a promising nature-based climate solution. Yet there are context-dependent biophysical, financial, land-use and operational constraints to reforestation that demand careful consideration. Here, we show that 121 million ha of presently degraded land in Southeast Asia, a region noted for its significant reforestation potential, are biophysically suitable for reforestation. Reforestation of this land would contribute 3.43 ± 1.29 PgCO2e yr−1 to climate mitigation through 2030. However, by taking a combination of on-the-ground financial, land use and operational constraints into account, we find that only a fraction of that mitigation potential may be achievable (0.3–18%). Such constraints are not insurmountable, but they show that careful planning and consideration are needed for effective landscape-scale reforestation.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....01aebed8a5b23e31af0280734e299f54
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.17863/cam.57875