Mapping palm oil expansion using SAR to study the impact on the CO 2 cycle

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Abstract

With Malaysia being the second largest palm oil producer in the world and the fact that palm oil ranks first in vegetable oil production on the world market the palm oil industry became an important factor in the country. Along with the expansion of palm oil across the nation causing deforestation of natural rain forest and conversion of peat land into plantation land there are several factors causing a tremendous increase in carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. Main causes of CO2 emission apart from deforestation and peat-land conversion are the fires to create plantation land plus the fires burning waste products of the plantations itself. This paper describes a project that aims at the development of a remote sensing monitoring system to allow a continuous observation of oil palm plantation activities and expansion in order to be able to quantify CO2 emissions. The research concentrates on developing a spaceborne synthetic aperture radar information extraction system for palm oil plantations in the Tropics. This will lead to objective figures that can be used internationally to create a policy implementation plan to sustainably reduce CO2 emission in the future. © Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd.

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APA

Pohl, C. (2014). Mapping palm oil expansion using SAR to study the impact on the CO 2 cycle. In IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science (Vol. 20). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1755-1315/20/1/012012

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