«In 1997, human - caused
Indonesian peat fires were estimated to have released between 13 % and 40 % of the average carbon emissions caused by the burning of fossil fuels around the world in a single year.»
Special report on smoke pollution from
Indonesian peat fires by correspondent Yew Jin Lee, with 3 experts.
In 2015 alone, scientists estimate
Indonesian peat fires were responsible for about 1.5 billion tons of carbon emissions.
Not exact matches
In Southeast Asia, each El Niño cycle brings drying to thousands of islands in the
Indonesian archipelago, with attendant crop failures, famine and
peat fires.
Step one, Skar said, is that the United States needs to acknowledge emissions coming from the
peat fires are not just an
Indonesian problem.
With the backdrop of massive
peat land
fires sending carbon into the atmosphere and the fast - approaching U.N. climate talks, environmental advocates expect today's visit between
Indonesian President Joko «Jokowi» Widodo and President Obama to touch on climate change and deforestation challenges.
Our ensemble
fire weather season length metric captured important wildfire events throughout Eurasia such as the
Indonesian fires of 1997 — 98 where
peat fires, following an El Niño - induced drought, released carbon equivalent to 13 — 40 % of the global fossil fuel emissions from only 1.4 % of the global vegetated land area (Fig. 4, 1997 — 1998) 46 and the heatwave over Western Russia in 2010 (Fig. 4, 2010) that led to its worst
fire season in recorded history and triggered extreme air pollution in Moscow51.
The seasonal variation is quite large with regard to
indonesian annual
peat fires (mostly Sept and Nov).
How well did your models capture
Indonesian lower and mid troposphere point source aerosol deposition from burning
peat fires?
The restoration project is mandated by the
Indonesian government under various policies, issued in the wake of the 2015
fires, to protect the carbon - rich
peat forests.
As one tonne of carbon equates to 3.67 tonnes of CO2, the 1997
Indonesian peat forest
fires emitted between 2.97 and 9.43 billion tonnes of CO2.
Indonesian military personnel fighting a large
peat fire near the city of Palangkaraya in the
Indonesian province of Central Kalimantan on Borneo.
In 2015, after months of forest
fires and choking pollution levels, the
Indonesian government identified dozens of companies responsible for millions of hectares of torched forest and
peat land.