News & Events
16 maart 2023
Recovering forests regain a quarter of deforestation carbon losses
Research demonstrates the importance of conserving recovering forests along with protecting old-growth forest
- A new study published in Nature and led by Viola Heinrich from the University of Bristol and Exeter reveals that tropical forests recovering from deforestation and degradation only successfully combat a quarter of the current carbon emissions.
- In the Tropics, forests that are recovering from human disturbances remove 107 million tonnes of above-ground carbon every year.
- Per hectare, the greatest carbon reductions were found in Borneo compared to the Amazon and Central Africa.
- The findings demonstrate the important carbon value of conserving recovering forests along with protecting old-growth forests.
- The study was conducted by researchers working on the ESA-funded RECCAP-2 project uses satellite dat a from ESA’s Climate Change Initiative.
Read the full story at esa.int
Reference:
Heinrich, V.H.A., Vancutsem, C., Dalagnol, R. et al. The carbon sink of secondary and degraded humid tropical forests. Nature 615, 436–442 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-022-05679-w