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  1. Topics
  2. Ecosystems
  3. LIFE Multi Peat
  • LIFE Multi Peat
  • The benefits of peatland restoration for Europe
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LIFE Multi Peat

A project to restore and manage peatlands in Poland, Belgium, the Netherlands, Ireland and Germany

The Torfowiska Orawsko-Nowotarskie raised bog: Polish project site - photo: Tomasz Wilk

The Torfowiska Orawsko-Nowotarskie raised bog: Polish project site - photo: Tomasz Wilk

Healthy peatlands matter! Peatlands are the largest natural terrestrial carbon store worldwide. However, damaged peatlands are a major source of greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions. On a global scale, the EU is the second largest emitter of GHG from drained peatlands. By rehabilitating the hydrological system of degraded peatlands, the project ‘LIFE Multi Peat’ plans to transform an unfavourable situation into a favourable one – carbon dioxide emissions from peatlands on the project sites will be reduced instantly. In the long term, the conditions to restart the sequestering functions of the peatlands will be reestablished.

But what does the acronym ‘Multi Peat’ stands for? Multi-stakeholder Landscape and Technical Innovation leading to Peatland Ecosystem Restoration: This is the full name of the five-year LIFE project that aims to contribute to the goals of EU climate change mitigation policy through the restoration of peatlands in Poland, Belgium, the Netherlands, Ireland and Germany.


Insights into our German project site


The specific LIFE Multi Peat objectives are threefold

➣ The large-scale practical restoration of degraded peatlands will lead to the cessation of significant GHG emissions from the project sites. As a result of the rehabilitation of the degraded peatland sites, their CO2 emissions will be reduced. In the long term, the conditions to restart the sequestering functions of the peatlands will be reestablished. Moreover, by monitoring the impact of the rewetting measures, the project will contribute to the body knowledge on the techniques and tools for the measurement of GHG emissions.

➣ The development of a knowledge base and replicable techniques are essential for halting further significant emissions from different classes of degraded peatlands and ultimately restoring their potential as carbon sinks.

➣ The third objective is the development of effective policy tools, such as a peatland policy toolkit that includes an EU-wide policy catalogue, data portal, and a policy development tool. The tool will bring together relevant information for policy makers, conservationists, other experts, and the general public in one place.



  • The partially degraded raised bog Torfowiska Orawsko-Nowotarskie is to be rewetted as part of LIFE Multi Peat - photo: Tomasz Wilk

  • The 'Häsener Luch' is located near Gransee Germany: project measures are to take place on an area of 20 hectares over the next few years - photo: Jonathan Etzold / NABU

  • Common tree frog: On the Dutch project site this species declined in the last years. With the project measures, we expect the species to return - photo: ondrejprosicky - stock.adobe.com

  • Alder swamp forest in Ham, Belgium: A small patch is in a good state during winter, but the water level drops severly in summer - photo: Cyr Mestdagh / Natuurpunt

  • The National University of Ireland is part of the EU project LIFE Multi Peat: Here you can see the Irish project area - photo: Niall O'Brolchain

Project facts

project title
LIFE Multi Peat

countries
Poland, Belgium, the Netherlands, Ireland and Germany

period
2021 to 2026

partners
Natuurpunt, National University of Ireland, Natuurmonumenten, Eurosite, Klub Przyrodników, Ogólnopolskie Towarzystwo Ochrony Ptaków (OTOP), NABU

sponsored by / supported by
LIFE Climate Change Mitigation Programme

With this project we are contributing to the following SDGs
Directly: SDG 12, SDG 13 and SDG 15
Indirectly: SDG 3, SDG 6 and SDG 17

Get more details


Objectives and scope

➣ Restoration of degraded peatlands: improving hydrological situation (e.g. drainage ditches), removing trees and shrubs / Improving the state of habitats and relevant species

➣ Establish paludiculture solutions: feasibility studies in Belgium and Germany

➣ Develop an EU-wide toolkit to catalogue peatland projects, policies and data

Expected impacts

➣ 689 ha of degraded peatlands restored

➣ Up to 50% reduction of Global Warming Potential on all sites (3600 t CO2-eq./yr)

➣ Strategies for paludiculture (also as buffer zones) in Germany and Belgium

➣ Improved communication and coordinated collaboration amongst EU peatland projects

➣ Recommendations for scaling up peatland restoration

Planned restoration activities

➣ Poland (252 ha): Orawa Bogs

➣ Germany (20 - 60 ha*): Häsener Luch
* The central 20 ha peatland owned by NABU is planned to become a living peatland again. The project also expects to improve the peatland conditions of the rest of the nature reserve which covers a total of around 60 ha.

➣ Belgium (130 ha): Vallei van de Grote beek

➣ Netherlands (30 ha): Witte Veen

➣ Ireland (217 ha): Connemara

The restoration measures seek to reestablish the natural function of peatlands as carbon sinks. This mainly entails rewetting drained areas, though actions will vary according to individual conditions of each project site. For example, in some areas shrubs and trees will be removed and active planting of peat forming vegetation will be carried out.

Monitoring activities

To assess the climate effect of the restoration, the project is using two techniques:

(a) the Greenhouse Gas Emission Site Type (GEST) approach which estimates greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions from the sites based on vegetation composition and water levels

(b) direct measurements, with transparent and non-transparent chambers

To learn more about monitoring techniques you can check this feature or this one here.

From a longer time perspective, GHG emissions will be measured by the closed chamber technique, 3 sites per country:

➣ Reference site without restoration activities

➣ Rewetted site directly affected by restoration activities

➣ Restored site (5-10 years ago)

Environmental parameters will be recorded: water level, soil temperature, soil moisture and photosynthetic active radiation by automatic loggers for modelling approaches.

LIFE Multi Peat will set monitoring plots, perform a final vegetation mapping and calculate the GHG budgets during and after the restorations.

Communication objectives

Overall objective
‘Branding’ LIFE Multi Peat via increasing the recognition of the project name, its main goals and outputs to create broader support for peatland restoration and conservation across Europe

Specific objectives

➣ Increasing knowledge
Sharing and exchanging the experience and lessons learned from the project implementation, including paludiculture techniques, peatland restoration measures as well as GHG monitoring instruments: The project’s communication activities will contribute to the body of knowledge on peatland restoration, reduction of carbon emissions, and increase of carbon storage. Moreover, the creation and dissemination of an EU-wide policy catalogue will improve the public knowledge and awareness of peatland issues, including policy and environmental information.

➣ Raising awareness / influencing attitude
As part of this objective, the goal is to showcase how healthy peatlands contribute to mitigating climate change by functioning as carbon sinks, halting drainage and GHG emissions. Moreover, raising awareness in the decision-making arena by fact sheets, key policy analyses and recommendations, and national reviews of the CAP’s impact on peatlands and GHG emissions is important to ensure informed decisions made by policy-makers in the future.

➣ Changing behaviour
Project partners will attempt to affect behavioral change among target groups to achieve best practices for paludiculture and peatland restoration and management, as well as regarding the development of future peatland policy.

Partners of LIFE Multi Peat



backGround

The Torfowiska Orawsko-Nowotarskie raised bog, Polish project site, LIFE Multi Peat - photo: Tomasz Wilk
Wet peatlands needed, now!

Today it is clearer than ever that we need to restore all drained peatlands worldwide by 2050. So, what are we waiting for? There are now plans to revitalize 689 hectares of peatland in Ireland, Belgium, the Netherlands, Poland and Germany. more →

Logo: United Nations
Make Peatlands Wet Again

Intended as “a global rallying cry to heal our planet”, the UN has dedicated the years 2021 to 2030 to ecosystem restoration. Ringing in this next important chapter, it’s time to scale up action to save peatlands from degradation. Solutions are within reach. more →

further projects

Sunset over Madiesenu Mire in Augstroze, Latvia - photo: Mara Pakalne
LIFE Peat Restore

NABU is part of the LIFE Peat Restore project that aims to rewet degraded peatlands covering an area of 5,300 hectares in Germany, Poland, Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia to restore their function as carbon sinks. more →

Fog over the variegated landscape of "Zacharovanyj Kraj" National Park - Foto: USPB
Protecting the 'Enchanted Valley' bog

In the Ukraine, NABU can rely on active animal support to protect important peatlands – in the 'Enchanted Land' National Park, beavers and their dams assist with the rewetting of precious peatlands, thereby fostering climate and species protection. more →

related topics

Make Peatlands wet again! - photo: Adobe Stock / Countrypixel
Ecosystems

An ecosystem is a complex of living organisms. NABU focuses on restoring ecosystems to their original state and important regulatory functions such as carbon sequestration. Ideally, by creating conditions in which the ecosystem can recover on its own. more →

climate change - photo: Adobe Stock / Maridav
Climate Change

Climate change and biodiversity loss are the most pressing challenges to humanity. Finally, people start to realize they are both sides of the same coin. NABU stands with science. We demand and support all efforts to reach a net-zero carbon economy globally. more →

Malachite Kingfisher in Ethiopia - photo: Bruno D/'Amicis
Biodiversity

Ecosystem functioning needs to be seen as a global task. Therefore, NABU is active in 36 biodiversity hotspots and beyond. As part of the BirdLife network, bird conservation has a long tradition for us. Its efforts contribute to biodiversity as a whole. more →

contact

Leticia Jurema - Foto: Sevens+Maltry
Letícia Jurema
Project Coordinator LIFE Multi Peat multipeat@NABU.de

Visit the LIFE Multi Peat dedicated project website.

Click here

project logo

LIFE Multi Peat logo

project governance

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Project co-funding

LIFE programme logo | courtesy of LIFE

Co-financing  

Nardowy Fundusz
Provincie Verijssel

Network

logo: Global Peatlands Initiative

NABU is a member of the Global Peatlands Initiative.

project leaflet

project leaflet LIFE Multi Peat - thumbnail
Leaflet LIFE Multi Peat PDF (6.5 MB)

Demand from over 100 organisations

Declaration "Power to the Peatlands" - European Peatland Conference PDF (1.1 MB)

Where we work

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Where we work: Europe, Africa, Asia, Caucasus
Where we work: Europe, Africa, Asia, Caucasus Where we work

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