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 Bogs neglected in climate battle - study
    November 09 2009 at 02:30AM Get IOL on your
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By Gerard Wynn

Barcelona, Spain - Draining and burning of the world's peat bogs accounts for about 5.5 percent of global carbon emissions but are currently excluded from governments' climate targets and United Nations talks, a study found on Wednesday.

Peat stores around twice as much carbon as all the world's trees, but compared with the well-publicised issues of fossil fuels and forests, the sector was the "Cinderella" of climate change policies, said Hans Joosten at Germany's Greifswald University, co-author of the report.

"We call for mandatory accounting of emissions from peatlands," said Susanna Tol of the environment group Wetlands International, presenting the findings on the sidelines of November 2-6 UN climate talks in Barcelona. Reporting was only voluntary now, she said.
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"So far these emissions have not been addressed" in UN talks meant to agree a global climate deal in Copenhagen in December, Tol added. The 175-nation meeting in Barcelona is the final session of preparatory talks before Copenhagen.

Layers of peat up to 20m thick accumulate as plants rot in wetland areas. As the vegetation is water-logged, it doesn't decay and release the stored carbon dioxide into the air, a major cause of global warming.

But landowners and farmers are draining peatlands, notably in South East Asia, to plant oil palm plantations to meet rapidly growing demand from the food and biofuel industries.

Tol said peatland emissions must be included in far higher profile UN talks to design a framework for cutting emissions from the destruction of rainforests, often in peatland areas. The study echoed the findings of an article published on Tuesday in the journal Nature Geoscience, which found that draining peatland in South East Asia alone produced carbon emissions equal to a quarter of those from global deforestation.

That study put CO2 emissions from deforestation at 12 percent of the global total, not 20 percent as widely thought. - Reuters

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