European Union flag

Agricultural use of organic soils contributes substantially to GHG emissions from organic soils. The Austrian Environment Agency addresses these questions in a project aiming to improve the estimates of drained organic soils in the Austrian National GHG Inventory

The IPCC Wetland Supplement defines organic soils, which besides peat soils also include other soils with high SOC content. Reducing GHG emissions by adapting management of drained organic soils is one possibility for farmers to significantly contribute to climate change mitigation. In addition, drainage due to forestry is likely a high emission source. To report the GHG emissions, but also to address the mitigation potentials, it is important to know the location of organic soils, their drainage status and how farmers manage these soils.

The Austrian Environment Agency addresses these questions in a project aiming to improve the estimates of drained organic soils in the Austrian National GHG Inventory (duration January 2022 to May 2024 funded by the Federal Ministry of Climate Action). For this purpose, all available soil, land use and drainage data sources were analyzed in close cooperation with national soil experts and data providers of the respective sources.

To estimate the areas of drained organic soils per land use category, three main steps were conducted:

  • The area of drained soils was gathered based on a compilation of national soil inventories: agricultural soil mapping (Landwirtschaftliche Bodenkartierung) and federal financial land valuation (Finanzbodenschätzung), the melioration registry (Meliorationskataster) and historic peat mapping information (historisches Moorkataster).
  • Information on the occurrence of organic soils is based on the same national soil inventories, historic peat mapping information and the Austrian peat protection map (Moorschutzkatalog).
  • The information on the current land-use is derived from a status layer which combines various data sources such as the Austrian Cadastral Map (DKM), forest map, national IACS/LPIS and agriculture layers, water bodies layer, Austrian peat protection map (Moorschutzkatalog) and remote sensing data for detection of bare rocks/unvegetated areas.

Finally, the results of these three steps were combined, using a weighting factor according to the quality/reliability of the data sources, and put into a rasterized GIS product which depicts the likelihood of occurrence of drained organic soils for Austria in a geographically-explicit manner. Due to a lack of national data on emissions from drained organic soils, literature research was conducted to identify emission factors (e.g. from neighboring countries) which are suitable for the Austrian conditions in order to replace the IPCC default factors, where applicable. The result is the countrywide estimate of GHG emissions for managed organic soils.

Other case studies