Online Map of June's 2013 Fire Affected Area in Riau (Before and After)

This interactive <a href=http://www.cifor.org/map/fire/> online map </a> shows area affected by June 2013's fire that created trans-boundary haze events in South East Asia. The trans-boundary haze events are associated with large forest and peatland fires in Indonesia. These episodes of extreme air pollution usually occur during drought years induced by climate anomalies from the Pacific (El Niño Southern Oscillation) and Indian Oceans (Indian Ocean Dipole). However, in June 2013 – a non-drought year – Singapore’s 24-hr Pollutants Standards Index reached an all-time record 246 (rated ‘‘very unhealthy’’). Here, we show using remote sensing, rainfall records and other data, that the Indonesian fires behind the 2013 haze followed a two-month dry spell in a wetter-than-average year. These fires were short-lived (one week) and limited to a localized area in Central Sumatra (1.6% of Indonesia): burning an estimated 163,336 ha, including 137,044 ha (84%) on peat. Most burning was confined to deforested lands (82%; 133,216 ha). The greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions during this brief, localized event were considerable: 172 ± 59 Tg CO2-eq (or 31 ± 12 Tg C), representing 5–10% of Indonesia’s mean annual GHG emissions for 2000–2005. Our observations show that extreme air pollution episodes in Southeast Asia are no longer restricted to drought years. We expect major haze events to be increasingly frequent because of ongoing deforestation of Indonesian peatlands.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
Other Authors: Admin, Dataverse
Format: spatial data biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
Subjects:Climate Change, Energy and low carbon development (CCE), Value Chain, Finance & Investments (VFI), imagery, degraded forests, peatlands, forest fires,
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.17528/CIFOR/DATA.00082
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spelling dat-cifor-10.17528CIFORDATA.000822019-07-03T07:21:10ZOnline Map of June's 2013 Fire Affected Area in Riau (Before and After)https://doi.org/10.17528/CIFOR/DATA.00082Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)This interactive <a href=http://www.cifor.org/map/fire/> online map </a> shows area affected by June 2013's fire that created trans-boundary haze events in South East Asia. The trans-boundary haze events are associated with large forest and peatland fires in Indonesia. These episodes of extreme air pollution usually occur during drought years induced by climate anomalies from the Pacific (El Niño Southern Oscillation) and Indian Oceans (Indian Ocean Dipole). However, in June 2013 – a non-drought year – Singapore’s 24-hr Pollutants Standards Index reached an all-time record 246 (rated ‘‘very unhealthy’’). Here, we show using remote sensing, rainfall records and other data, that the Indonesian fires behind the 2013 haze followed a two-month dry spell in a wetter-than-average year. These fires were short-lived (one week) and limited to a localized area in Central Sumatra (1.6% of Indonesia): burning an estimated 163,336 ha, including 137,044 ha (84%) on peat. Most burning was confined to deforested lands (82%; 133,216 ha). The greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions during this brief, localized event were considerable: 172 ± 59 Tg CO2-eq (or 31 ± 12 Tg C), representing 5–10% of Indonesia’s mean annual GHG emissions for 2000–2005. Our observations show that extreme air pollution episodes in Southeast Asia are no longer restricted to drought years. We expect major haze events to be increasingly frequent because of ongoing deforestation of Indonesian peatlands.Climate Change, Energy and low carbon development (CCE)Value Chain, Finance & Investments (VFI)imagerydegraded forestspeatlandsforest firesEnglishAdmin, Dataversespatial data
institution CIFOR
collection Dataverse
country Indonesia
countrycode ID
component Datos de investigación
access En linea
En linea
databasecode dat-cifor
tag biblioteca
region Asia del Sureste
libraryname Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
language English
topic Climate Change, Energy and low carbon development (CCE)
Value Chain, Finance & Investments (VFI)
imagery
degraded forests
peatlands
forest fires
Climate Change, Energy and low carbon development (CCE)
Value Chain, Finance & Investments (VFI)
imagery
degraded forests
peatlands
forest fires
spellingShingle Climate Change, Energy and low carbon development (CCE)
Value Chain, Finance & Investments (VFI)
imagery
degraded forests
peatlands
forest fires
Climate Change, Energy and low carbon development (CCE)
Value Chain, Finance & Investments (VFI)
imagery
degraded forests
peatlands
forest fires
Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
Online Map of June's 2013 Fire Affected Area in Riau (Before and After)
description This interactive <a href=http://www.cifor.org/map/fire/> online map </a> shows area affected by June 2013's fire that created trans-boundary haze events in South East Asia. The trans-boundary haze events are associated with large forest and peatland fires in Indonesia. These episodes of extreme air pollution usually occur during drought years induced by climate anomalies from the Pacific (El Niño Southern Oscillation) and Indian Oceans (Indian Ocean Dipole). However, in June 2013 – a non-drought year – Singapore’s 24-hr Pollutants Standards Index reached an all-time record 246 (rated ‘‘very unhealthy’’). Here, we show using remote sensing, rainfall records and other data, that the Indonesian fires behind the 2013 haze followed a two-month dry spell in a wetter-than-average year. These fires were short-lived (one week) and limited to a localized area in Central Sumatra (1.6% of Indonesia): burning an estimated 163,336 ha, including 137,044 ha (84%) on peat. Most burning was confined to deforested lands (82%; 133,216 ha). The greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions during this brief, localized event were considerable: 172 ± 59 Tg CO2-eq (or 31 ± 12 Tg C), representing 5–10% of Indonesia’s mean annual GHG emissions for 2000–2005. Our observations show that extreme air pollution episodes in Southeast Asia are no longer restricted to drought years. We expect major haze events to be increasingly frequent because of ongoing deforestation of Indonesian peatlands.
author2 Admin, Dataverse
author_facet Admin, Dataverse
Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
format spatial data
topic_facet Climate Change, Energy and low carbon development (CCE)
Value Chain, Finance & Investments (VFI)
imagery
degraded forests
peatlands
forest fires
author Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
author_sort Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
title Online Map of June's 2013 Fire Affected Area in Riau (Before and After)
title_short Online Map of June's 2013 Fire Affected Area in Riau (Before and After)
title_full Online Map of June's 2013 Fire Affected Area in Riau (Before and After)
title_fullStr Online Map of June's 2013 Fire Affected Area in Riau (Before and After)
title_full_unstemmed Online Map of June's 2013 Fire Affected Area in Riau (Before and After)
title_sort online map of june's 2013 fire affected area in riau (before and after)
publisher Center for International Forestry Research (CIFOR)
url https://doi.org/10.17528/CIFOR/DATA.00082
work_keys_str_mv AT centerforinternationalforestryresearchcifor onlinemapofjunes2013fireaffectedareainriaubeforeandafter
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