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Commentary
Indonesia’s Fire Outbreaks Producing More Daily Emissions than Entire US Economy
More than half the fires are burning on peatlands, which hold some of the highest quantities of carbon on Earth.
By:
Nancy Harris
Susan Minnemeyer
Fred Stolle
and
Octavia Payne
October 16, 2015
Explore More:
Climate
Forests
agriculture
climate change
fires
commodities
Image by
Rini Sulaiman/ Norwegian Embassy for Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
According to estimates released this week by Guido van der Werf on the
Global Fire Emissions Database
, there have been
nearly 100,000 active fire detections
in Indonesia so far in 2015, which since September have generated emissions each day exceeding the average daily emissions from all U.S. economic activity. Following several recent intense outbreaks of fires—in
June 2013
March 2014
and
November 2014
—the country is now on track to experience more fires this year than it did during the 2006 fire season, one of its worst on record.
On 26 of the past 44 days (indicated in gold), daily estimated GHG emissions from fires in Indonesia surpassed average daily emissions from the entire US economy (approximately 15.95 Mt CO2 per day). A massive spike in emissions can be seen on October 14, when 4,719 fires were observed.
Fire emission estimates based on the Global Fire Emissions Database (GFED4s, >www.globalfiredata.org<) updated for 2015 using NASA MODIS active fire data (Figure courtesy Guido van der Werf).
Emissions Spikes Caused by Burning Peatlands
Global Forest Watch Fires
shows that more than half of these fires have occurred on peatland areas, concentrated mainly in South Sumatra, South and Central Kalimantan, and Papua. These regions continue to suffer major fires as the fire alerts density map below shows, with few signs that occurrences are diminishing.
Global Forest Watch Fires heatmap shows areas with highest concentrations of fires.
The burning of tropical peatlands is so significant for greenhouse gas emissions because these areas
store some of the highest quantities of carbon
on Earth, accumulated over thousands of years. Draining and burning these lands for agricultural expansion (such as conversion to oil palm or pulpwood plantations) leads to huge spikes in greenhouse gas emissions. Fires also emit methane, a greenhouse gas
21 times more potent
than carbon dioxide (CO2), but peat fires may emit
up to 10 times more methane
than fires occurring on other types of land.
Taken together, the impact of peat fires on global warming may be more than 200 times greater than fires on other lands.
Putting the Data in Perspective
What does a climate catastrophe look like in a real world context? Since September, daily emissions from Indonesia’s fires exceeded daily emissions from the entire U.S. economy on 26 days. To put it into perspective, the U.S. economy is
20 times larger
than Indonesia’s. Van der Werf pointed out in a recent report that emissions from these fires over a three-week period are also already higher than the
total annual CO2 emissions of Germany
On October 14, which had the highest number of fires to date this year with 4,719, MODIS Terra imagery reveals smoke plumes from massive peat fires on Kalimantan.
How did we compare emissions from Indonesia’s fires to US emissions?
Van der Werf’s research team developed rough estimates of the greenhouse gas emissions arising from recent Indonesia fires using estimates from past years based on satellite data and fire emissions models. They calculated that the 96,937 fires in Indonesia detected to date this year emitted roughly 1,043 million metric tons of carbon dioxide equivalent emissions (Mt CO2eq) cumulatively. Based on the modeled relationship of fire counts to emissions, it is possible to estimate daily emissions based on the number of fires occurring on a specific day.
Using this information, it becomes apparent that on 26 of the past 44 days (up to October 14), daily estimated greenhouse gas emissions from fires in Indonesia surpassed average daily emissions from the entire US economy (approximately 15.95 Mt CO2 per day).
For Indonesia, the Climate Challenge Is a Land Management Challenge
Reducing emissions from fires is a significant challenge. Last month, Indonesia
released a draft
of its new climate plan, or Intended Nationally Determined Contribution (INDC), ahead of the climate negotiations taking place at the Paris COP in December. The draft INDC calls for at least a 29 percent emissions reduction below business as usual by 2030— and up to 41 percent in reduction with international assistance and cooperation. While the new data shows how fires present a major challenge to reaching this goal, Indonesia can still make progress if the government focuses on better land planning, improved law enforcement, and alternatives for small farmers to burning land. If Indonesia is to meet its climate commitment, making significant investments in these areas to prevent future fires must be the first step.
Editor's Note: An earlier version of this post omitted the word "million" from a figure for the overall emissions of Indonesia's fires this year. The number has been updated to read "1,043 million metric tons".
Featured WRI Experts:
Nancy Harris
Research Manager, Global Forest Watch
Fred Stolle
Deputy Director, Forests
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