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Youth build start-up capital while reducing corporate carbon footprint
Science discussion on “Peatland fires, haze and health” at the Global Landscapes Forum: Peatlands Matter in Jakarta.
Abdul Agus Nuraini, Muara Siran community member, speaks during the Forum's plenary session on community perspectives and priorities in peatlands.
Scientists have recently discovered the existence of huge, previously unknown areas of peatland in central Africa and South America.
The peatlands of the Congo Basin have formed over thousands of years, and are estimated to contain about 30 billion tons of carbon.
The DRC has the biggest forest in Central Africa. The peatland discovered in the Central Basin is important for its significant biodiversity.
Protecting peatlands also means identifying ways for people that live and work around these areas to sustain their families.
Tropical peatlands are massive carbon sinks. But what happens when they are depleted of the water that sustains them, or subject to other land-use changes?
There is increasing recognition that more integrated approaches to ecosystem health assessments are needed to meet the targets of the 2030 Agenda.
What do a hairy-nosed otter, a Sumatran tiger and a white-backed Malayan Tapir have in common? Not only are they some of the rarest animals on planet earth, they spend most of their days snuffling through peatlands. “Conversations about protecting peatlands tend to focus on the carbon they store that can be released into our […]
The destruction of forest cover on peatlands delivers a blow for carbon emissions with losses from standing biomass and from the drying of peat soils.
Not widely known, peat is the world’s largest terrestrial organic soil carbon stock. Peatlands are found on every continent and in most countries.
March 21 is the UN International Day of Forests, and we have a round-up of some of our best content on this year's theme: Forests and Energy.
The successful Brazilian experience in slowing down deforestation for cattle ranching in the Amazon has captured a lot of attention in the global arena.
The direct effects of trees on the climate via rainfall and cooling may be more important than the well-studied effects through the global carbon balance.