Article

An assessment of high carbon stock and high conservation value approaches to sustainable oil palm cultivation in Gabon

Details

Citation

Austin KG, Lee ME, Clark C, Forester BR, Urban DL, White L, Kasibhatla PS & Poulsen JR (2017) An assessment of high carbon stock and high conservation value approaches to sustainable oil palm cultivation in Gabon. Environmental Research Letters, 12 (1), Art. No.: 014005. https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-9326/aa5437

Abstract
Industrial-scale oil palm cultivation is rapidly expanding in Gabon, where it has the potential to drive economic growth, but also threatens forest, biodiversity and carbon resources. The Gabonese government is promoting an ambitious agricultural expansion strategy, while simultaneously committing to minimize negative environmental impacts of oil palm agriculture. This study estimates the extent and location of suitable land for oil palm cultivation in Gabon, based on an analysis of recent trends in plantation permitting. We use the resulting suitability map to evaluate two proposed approaches to minimizing negative environmental impacts: a High Carbon Stock (HCS) approach, which emphasizes forest protection and climate change mitigation, and a High Conservation Value (HCV) approach, which focuses on safeguarding biodiversity and ecosystems. We quantify the forest area, carbon stock, and biodiversity resources protected under each approach, using newly developed maps of priority species distributions and forest biomass for Gabon. We find 2.7–3.9 Mha of suitable or moderately suitable land that avoid HCS areas, 4.4 million hectares (Mha) that avoid HCV areas, and 1.2–1.7 Mha that avoid both. This suggests that Gabon's oil palm production target could likely be met without compromising important ecosystem services, if appropriate safeguards are put in place. Our analysis improves understanding of suitability for oil palm in Gabon, determines how conservation strategies align with national targets for oil palm production, and informs national land use planning.

Keywords
palm oil; high carbon stock; high conservation value; land use; conservation science

Journal
Environmental Research Letters: Volume 12, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Publication date05/01/2017
Publication date online05/01/2017
Date accepted by journal16/12/2016
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/25129
PublisherIOP Publishing
eISSN1748-9326

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