New research finds that 25% of Europe’s peatlands are degraded, increasing to 50% -120,000km2- when looking at the European Union alone. In more than half of Europe’s natural peatland (mire) regions, the Convention on Biological Diversity 2020 target for at least 17% of areas to be protected has not yet been met for peatlands.
Scientists from the Greifswald Mire Centre, the UN Environment Programme World Conservation Monitoring Centre (UNEP-WCMC), and from several European countries have teamed up to analyse the condition and protection status of European mire ecosystems in research published in Diversity.
Peatlands are vital habitats and store vast stocks of carbon; they have a crucial role in addressing the twin climate and biodiversity crises. In an intact peatland, carbon stores slowly accumulate, but when these ecosystems are degraded by drainage, fire or other pressures, they become a significant source of greenhouse gas emissions.
Europe is the continent with the largest proportional loss of mires, because of its long history, high population pressure, and conversion to agriculture.
The European countries with the highest proportion of degraded peatland (91%–100%) are Albania, Croatia, Cyprus, Denmark, Germany, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, Portugal, Republic of Macedonia, and Slovenia. Countries and areas with the most intact peatlands (less than 20% degraded) are Andorra, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Faroe Islands, Norway, and Svalbard.