Landowner perceptions towards bioenergy production on degraded lands in Indonesia

Various tree species have been identified as having potential for bioenergy and restoration of degraded land. Using degraded land for bioenergy production provides Indonesia with an opportunity to meet its rapidly growing energy demand while creating productive landscapes. However, bioenergy product...

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Main Authors: Artati, Y., Jaung, W., Juniwaty, K.S., Andini, S., Segah, H., Lee, S.M., Baral, H.
Format: Book Chapter
Language:Inglés
Published: Center for International Forestry Research 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/120162
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author Artati, Y.
Jaung, W.
Juniwaty, K.S.
Andini, S.
Segah, H.
Lee, S.M.
Baral, H.
author_browse Andini, S.
Artati, Y.
Baral, H.
Jaung, W.
Juniwaty, K.S.
Lee, S.M.
Segah, H.
author_facet Artati, Y.
Jaung, W.
Juniwaty, K.S.
Andini, S.
Segah, H.
Lee, S.M.
Baral, H.
author_sort Artati, Y.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Various tree species have been identified as having potential for bioenergy and restoration of degraded land. Using degraded land for bioenergy production provides Indonesia with an opportunity to meet its rapidly growing energy demand while creating productive landscapes. However, bioenergy production is not feasible without landowner participation. This study investigates factors affecting preferences for restoration tree species by analysing responses from 150 landowners with fire experience in Buntoi village in Central Kalimantan l. Results indicate 76% of landowners preferring familiar species with readily available markets, such as Albizia chinensis (sengon) and Hevea brasiliensis (rubber), for restoration on degraded land, with only 8% preferring Calophyllum inophyllum L. (nyamplung) for bioenergy production. The latter group of landowners revealed a capacity to handle the uncertainty of the bioenergy market as they had additional jobs and income, had migrated from Java where nyamplung is prevalent, or preferred agricultural extension to improve their technical capacity. These results contribute to identifying key conditions for a bottom-up approach to bioenergy production on degraded land in Indonesia: a stable bioenergy market for landowners, application of familiar bioenergy species, and agricultural extension support for capacity building.
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publishDate 2022
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spelling CGSpace1201622023-02-15T03:00:31Z Landowner perceptions towards bioenergy production on degraded lands in Indonesia Artati, Y. Jaung, W. Juniwaty, K.S. Andini, S. Segah, H. Lee, S.M. Baral, H. renewable energy bioenergy degraded land energy production Various tree species have been identified as having potential for bioenergy and restoration of degraded land. Using degraded land for bioenergy production provides Indonesia with an opportunity to meet its rapidly growing energy demand while creating productive landscapes. However, bioenergy production is not feasible without landowner participation. This study investigates factors affecting preferences for restoration tree species by analysing responses from 150 landowners with fire experience in Buntoi village in Central Kalimantan l. Results indicate 76% of landowners preferring familiar species with readily available markets, such as Albizia chinensis (sengon) and Hevea brasiliensis (rubber), for restoration on degraded land, with only 8% preferring Calophyllum inophyllum L. (nyamplung) for bioenergy production. The latter group of landowners revealed a capacity to handle the uncertainty of the bioenergy market as they had additional jobs and income, had migrated from Java where nyamplung is prevalent, or preferred agricultural extension to improve their technical capacity. These results contribute to identifying key conditions for a bottom-up approach to bioenergy production on degraded land in Indonesia: a stable bioenergy market for landowners, application of familiar bioenergy species, and agricultural extension support for capacity building. 2022-05-01 2022-07-19T07:10:45Z 2022-07-19T07:10:45Z Book Chapter https://hdl.handle.net/10568/120162 en Open Access Center for International Forestry Research Artati, Y., Jaung, W., Juniwaty, K.S., Andini, S., Segah, H., Lee, S.M., Baral, H., 2022. Landowner perceptions towards bioenergy production on degraded lands in Indonesia. In. Baral H, Leksono B and Seol M. (eds.), Bioenergy for landscape restoration and livelihoods: Re-creating energy-smart ecosystems on degraded landscapes. Bogor, Indonesia: CIFOR. https://doi.org/10.17528/cifor/008500-04
spellingShingle renewable energy
bioenergy
degraded land
energy production
Artati, Y.
Jaung, W.
Juniwaty, K.S.
Andini, S.
Segah, H.
Lee, S.M.
Baral, H.
Landowner perceptions towards bioenergy production on degraded lands in Indonesia
title Landowner perceptions towards bioenergy production on degraded lands in Indonesia
title_full Landowner perceptions towards bioenergy production on degraded lands in Indonesia
title_fullStr Landowner perceptions towards bioenergy production on degraded lands in Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed Landowner perceptions towards bioenergy production on degraded lands in Indonesia
title_short Landowner perceptions towards bioenergy production on degraded lands in Indonesia
title_sort landowner perceptions towards bioenergy production on degraded lands in indonesia
topic renewable energy
bioenergy
degraded land
energy production
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/120162
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