EBSCO Logo
Connecting you to content on EBSCOhost
Results
Title

Carbon Emissions from Oil Palm Induced Forest and Peatland Conversion in Sabah and Sarawak, Malaysia.

Authors

Wan Mohd Jaafar, Wan Shafrina; Said, Nor Fitrah Syazwani; Abdul Maulud, Khairul Nizam; Uning, Royston; Latif, Mohd Talib; Muhmad Kamarulzaman, Aisyah Marliza; Mohan, Midhun; Pradhan, Biswajeet; Saad, Siti Nor Maizah; Broadbent, Eben North; Cardil, Adrián; Silva, Carlos Alberto; Takriff, Mohd Sobri

Abstract

The palm oil industry is one of the major producers of vegetable oil in the tropics. Palm oil is used extensively for the manufacture of a wide variety of products and its production is increasing by around 9% every year, prompted largely by the expanding biofuel markets. The rise in annual demand for biofuels and vegetable oil from importer countries has caused a dramatic increase in the conversion of forests and peatlands into oil palm plantations in Malaysia. This study assessed the area of forests and peatlands converted into oil palm plantations from 1990 to 2018 in the states of Sarawak and Sabah, Malaysia, and estimated the resulting carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. To do so, we analyzed multitemporal 30-m resolution Landsat-5 and Landsat-8 images using a hybrid method that combined automatic image processing and manual analyses. We found that over the 28-year period, forest cover declined by 12.6% and 16.3%, and the peatland area declined by 20.5% and 19.1% in Sarawak and Sabah, respectively. In 2018, we found that these changes resulted in CO2 emissions of 0.01577 and 0.00086 Gt CO2-C yr−1, as compared to an annual forest CO2 uptake of 0.26464 and 0.15007 Gt CO2-C yr−1, in Sarawak and Sabah, respectively. Our assessment highlights that carbon impacts extend beyond lost standing stocks, and result in substantial direct emissions from the oil palm plantations themselves, with 2018 oil palm plantations in our study area emitting up to 4% of CO2 uptake by remaining forests. Limiting future climate change impacts requires enhanced economic incentives for land uses that neither convert standing forests nor result in substantial CO2 emissions.

Subjects

SABAH; SARAWAK; MALAYSIA; OIL palm; CARBON emissions; FOREST conversion; ATMOSPHERIC carbon dioxide; INCENTIVE (Psychology); PALM oil industry; VEGETABLE oils

Publication

Forests (19994907), 2020, Vol 11, Issue 12, p1285

ISSN

1999-4907

Publication type

Academic Journal

DOI

10.3390/f11121285

EBSCO Connect | Privacy policy | Terms of use | Copyright | Manage my cookies
Journals | Subjects | Sitemap
© 2025 EBSCO Industries, Inc. All rights reserved