4 research outputs found
Annual Forest Monitoring as part of Indonesia's National Carbon Accounting System
Land use and forest change, in particular deforestation, have contributed the largest proportion of Indonesia’s estimated
greenhouse gas emissions. Indonesia’s remaining forests store globally significant carbon stocks, as well as biodiversity values. In
2010, the Government of Indonesia entered into a REDD+ partnership. A spatially detailed monitoring and reporting system for
forest change which is national and operating in Indonesia is required for participation in such programs, as well as for national
policy reasons including Monitoring, Reporting, and Verification (MRV), carbon accounting, and land-use and policy information.
Indonesia’s National Carbon Accounting System (INCAS) has been designed to meet national and international policy
requirements. The INCAS remote sensing program is producing spatially-detailed annual wall-to-wall monitoring of forest cover
changes from time-series Landsat imagery for the whole of Indonesia from 2000 to the present day. Work on the program
commenced in 2009, under the Indonesia-Australia Forest Carbon Partnership. A principal objective was to build an operational
system in Indonesia through transfer of knowledge and experience, from Australia’s National Carbon Accounting System, and
adaptation of this experience to Indonesia’s requirements and conditions. A semi-automated system of image pre-processing
(ortho-rectification, calibration, cloud masking and mosaicing) and forest extent and change mapping (supervised classification of a
‘base’ year, semi-automated single-year classifications and classification within a multi-temporal probabilistic framework) was
developed for Landsat 5 TM and Landsat 7 ETM+. Particular attention is paid to the accuracy of each step in the processing.
With the advent of Landsat 8 data and parallel development of processing capability, capacity and international collaborations
within the LAPAN Data Centre this processing is being increasingly automated. Research is continuing into improved processing
methodology and integration of information from other data sources.
This paper presents technical elements of the INCAS remote sensing program and some results of the 2000 – 2012 mapping
Indonesian peat and vegetation fire emissions: Study on factors influencing large-scale smoke haze pollution using a regional atmospheric chemistry model
Air pollution, El Niño, Regional atmospheric chemistry model, Smoke dispersion, Southeast Asia, Vegetation and peat fires,