JOURNAL OF WETLANDS ENVIRONMENTAL MANAGEMENT
Vol 3, No 1 (2015): January-June

Life Cycle Assessment of Sago Palm, Oil Palm, and Paddy Cultivated on Peat Land

Saptarining Wulan (Environmental Science, University of Indonesia, Indonesia)
Haryoto Kusnoputranto (Department of Environmental Health, Faculty of Public Health and Postgraduate Program of Environmental Science, University of Indonesia, Indonesia)
Jatna Supriatna (Research Centre for Climate Change (RCCC), University of Indonesia, Indonesia)
H.M.H. Bintoro Djoefrie (Agronomy and Horticulture Department, Faculty of Agriculture, Bogor Agricultural University, Indonesia)
Hisyam Musthafa Al Hakim (Agroindustrial Technology, Lambung Mangkurat University, Indonesia.)



Article Info

Publish Date
16 Jan 2015

Abstract

The continuously increasing population growth more than food agriculture growth on the existing land, has been encouraging to this research. The land use competition for agriculture and housing purposes have caused the land use change from forest to agriculture and housing. Within forested landscapes food production, commodity agriculture, biodiversity, resource extraction and other land uses are also competing for space. The forest land use change (deforestation) is one of the climate change causes. The impact of climate change among others is the uncertain climate, such as the long drought period, flood, and the extreme temperature that cause decreasing in agriculture production. Therefore, at present, many people use the marginal land, such as peat land for agriculture cultivation to increase the food agriculture production and to achieve the domestic and export demand. Indonesia has a huge peat land and the fourth biggest in the world after Rusia, Canada, and America. The focus of this study is comparing the life cycle assessment of three agriculture commodities: sago palm, oil palm, and paddy cultivated on peat land. The purpose of this research is to contribute a recommendation of the most sustainable commodity from the aspect carbon dioxide (CO2) emission among three food agriculture commodities include oil palm and paddy that currently as excellent commodities, and sago palm, the neglected indigenous plant, which are cultivated on peat land. The method applied for this research to analyze the environmental aspect using life cycle assessment (LCA) started from seedling, plantation, harvesting, transportation, and production process. The analysis result reveals that sago palm is the most environmental friendly. The lowest CO2 emission (ton/ha/year) is sago palm (214.75 ± 23.49 kg CO2 eq), then paddy (322.03 ± 7.57 kg CO2 eq) and the highest CO2 emission (ton/ha/year) is oil palm (406.88 ± 97.09 kg CO2 eq).

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Journal Info

Abbrev

ijwem

Publisher

Subject

Agriculture, Biological Sciences & Forestry Chemical Engineering, Chemistry & Bioengineering Earth & Planetary Sciences Engineering Environmental Science

Description

Journal of Wetlands Environmental Management is an international journal that publishes authoritative and original articles on topics relevant to freshwater, brackish and marine coastal wetland ecosystems. The Journal serves as a multi-disciplinary forum covering key issues in wetlands science, ...