Palm oil deforestation in Indonesia rises, reversing a decade-long decline

After years of decreasing deforestation rates, Indonesia's palm oil industry has seen a resurgence in forest clearing, particularly on peatlands and in Borneo and Papua.

Hans Nicholas Jong reports for Mongabay.


In short:

  • Indonesia, the world's largest palm oil producer, experienced an increase in deforestation for palm oil plantations in 2023, marking a shift from a decade-long downward trend.
  • A significant portion of this deforestation occurred on carbon-rich peatlands, exacerbating greenhouse gas emissions.
  • The increase in deforestation is concentrated in Indonesian Borneo and Papua, moving away from the traditional palm oil heartland of Sumatra.

Key quote:

"So emissions from the palm oil [industry] is around a fifth of Indonesia’s emissions."

— Herry Purnomo, senior scientist and deputy country director at CIFOR

Why this matters:

The resurgence of deforestation in Indonesia for palm oil cultivation raises serious environmental concerns, particularly regarding carbon emissions and biodiversity loss. This trend challenges global efforts to combat climate change and highlights the need for sustainable agricultural practices and effective forest conservation policies.

Balancing palm oil and protected forests to conserve orangutans.

About the author(s):

EHN Curators
EHN Curators
Articles curated and summarized by the Environmental Health News' curation team. Some AI-based tools helped produce this text, with human oversight, fact checking and editing.

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