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Peatland Restoration (On Private Land)

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EUKI project Building a European Peatlands Alliance aims to establish a comprehensive and enduring European alliance of national governments and stakeholders committed to peatland climate action.

This brochure outlines how restoring Peatlands through rewetting, halting drainage, and vegetation restoration can turn them back into valuable carbon sinks. Peatlands store more carbon than forests yet cover only 3-4% of Earth’s surface. However, 46% of European peatlands are degraded, releasing 582 million tons of CO₂ annually. Restoration involves assessing peatland types and degradation levels, with goals of raising water levels, reducing emissions, and enhancing biodiversity. Monitoring progress is crucial for securing financial benefits, such as carbon credits. Successful examples, like Germany’s MoorFutures and the UK’s Peatland Code, highlight financial viability. Healthy peatlands offer flood protection, improved water quality, and rare species habitats, but restoration requires cooperation and economic consideration. The initiative promotes the „Triple E“ approach—ecology, economy, and education—for sustainable success.

Weitere Publikationen

publications
04.03.2026

Focus Paper Peatlands with Paludiculture

publications
02.03.2026

Focus Paper on Agroforestry Systems as Natural Carbon Sinks

publications
02.03.2026

Manual: Key Success Factors for Creating Natural Carbon Sinks with Farmers

publications
06.02.2026

EUKI Press Review 2025

publications
08.09.2025

Travnik's Climate Action Plan for Agriculture

publications
04.09.2025

Focus Paper on Healthy Agricultural Soils as Natural Carbon Sinks