Note: John R. Poulsen is available for additional comment at (919) 998-8647 or john.poulsen@duke.edu.

DURHAM, N.C. -- As oil palm production expands from Southeast Asia into Central Africa, a new 91社区福利-led study warns that converting Africa鈥檚 tropical forests into monoculture palm plantations will cause a significant spike in climate-warming carbon emissions. The authors urge regional governments to enact mandatory policies regulating which forests can be cleared and how much remaining forest must be set aside for conservation.

鈥淥ur case study, which focuses on oil palm farming in the nation of Gabon, finds that converting even previously logged forest into oil palm plantations will lead to high carbon emissions,鈥 said John R. Poulsen, assistant professor of tropical ecology at Duke鈥檚 Nicholas School of the Environment.

鈥淐learing just 11,500 hectares of forest -- or roughly 28,400 acres -- would release about 1.5 million metric tons of carbon into the atmosphere,鈥 Poulsen said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 equivalent to the annual emissions of some small developing countries.鈥

However, the new study finds that these emissions could be completely offset over 25 years if development were centered on forests that store less carbon and if a portion of every development had conservation set-asides.

Poulsen and his colleagues published their peer-reviewed study June 24 in the journal Conservation Letters.

They used field measurements and LiDAR satellite data to calculate forest carbon stocks -- the amount of carbon stored in trees -- and potential carbon emissions at the site of a 50,000-hectare palm oil plantation in Gabon. The plantation is being developed jointly by the Gabonese government and the agribusiness firm Olam International Ltd., to test if low-emissions palm oil development is feasible in the equatorial country on the Atlantic Ocean.

鈥淲hile Gabon has ambitions of becoming a leading producer of palm oil, it also has made pledges to protect its environment and biodiversity,鈥 Poulsen said. 鈥淚f this site is successful, it could open the door to development at other sites, so it鈥檚 imperative that our work helps the government strike the right balance between economic development and environmental conservation.鈥

In Southeast Asia, large-scale palm oil development has led to persistent, region-wide emissions problems and widespread deforestation and biodiversity loss, he noted. To prevent the same scenario from playing out in Gabon, the new study proposes a two-phase approach to plantation siting and development.

鈥淔irst, we recommend establishing a nationwide carbon threshold of 108 to 118 metric tons per hectare. Only forests that store less than this density of carbon will be considered suitable for development,鈥 Poulsen said. 鈥淪econd, palm oil companies will also have to set aside enough land within a plantation -- roughly 2.6 acres need to be set aside for every one acre developed -- to offset emissions.

鈥淭he precise set-aside ratio may vary by site, but 2.6 to 1 is generally the point at which carbon storage in the conserved forest will offset carbon loss in the rest of the plantation and achieve net-zero emissions over time,鈥 Poulsen explained.  

鈥淎lthough our study considers only forest carbon, and not biodiversity or other ecosystem services, we estimate there is enough low-carbon forest in Gabon to achieve net-zero emissions while still permitting the nation to meet its palm oil production goals,鈥 he said.

Allowing industry to voluntarily adhere to these new guidelines or opt out of them is not an option, he stressed. 鈥淭o succeed, this approach needs to be mandatory and implemented by the government with careful land-use planning and strict enforcement.鈥  

Support for this research came from Olam Palm Gabon and Duke鈥檚 Nicholas School of the Environment.

Poulsen conducted the study with Mark E.H. Burton, a 2014 Master of Environmental Management graduate of Duke鈥檚 Nicholas School. Other co-authors were Michelle E. Lee, Vincent P. Medjibe and Lee J.T. White of Gabon鈥檚 Agence Nationale des Parcs Nationaux, and Christopher G. Stewart and Arun Venkataraman of OLAM International Ltd.

CITATION: 鈥淩educing Carbon Emissions from Forest Conversion for Oil Palm Agriculture in Gabon,鈥 Mark E.H. Burton, John R. Poulsen, Michelle E. Lee, Vincent P. Medjibe, Christopher G. Stewart, Arun Venkataraman, Lee J.T. White. Conservation Letters, June 24, 2016.

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