WHY IS NATURE RESTORATION
Ref. Ares(2023)389474 - 18/01/2023
Ref. Ares(2023)782205 - 02/02/2023
CRITICAL FOR CLIMATE MITIGATION
IN THE EU?
Publication date:
December 2022
Authors: Evelyn Underwood, Gabriel e Aubert (IEEP)
The EU has set targets to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by at least 55% by 2030 and to
reach climate neutrality by 2050 to keep global temperature increase below 1.5°C. Europe’s land
is vital to achieving this goal. The land use and land use change and forestry (LULUCF) sector will
contribute by saving and storing an additional 310 to 400 MtCO2eq by 2030.
It will be impossible for the EU to meet its climate neutrality goal by 2050 and
the LULUCF land sink target without a significant scaling up of nature
restoration.
Nature restoration is central to our efforts to mitigate climate change as it
reduces and avoids emissions from land, enhances the capacity of ecosystems
to capture and sequester carbon in natural sinks, and can prevent future
emissions by increasing ecosystem resilience.
WHAT CAN THE NRL ACHIEVE?
• Restoring
peatlands, agroecosystems and forests holds great potential to safeguard carbon
stocks and increase sequestration.
• Theoretically, restoring 90% of terrestrial Annex I habitats which are in not good or unknown
condition to good condition could lead to a total carbon stock between 2,858 and 9,210 million
tC in the EU and sequester around 286 MtCO2eq/year [1]. While the time needed to achieve
these rates would largely exceed the 2030 deadline, these figures illustrate the theoretical
magnitude of the carbon storage and sequestration benefits which could be achieved by Article
4 of the nature restoration law.
• Events such as forest fires, floods and droughts will become more frequent and severe with
climate change over this decade. These events release large amounts of stored carbon into the
atmosphere. Restoration can increase the resilience of habitats to climate events and reduce
their impact on carbon stocks.
WHAT WOULD HAPPEN WITH NO RESTORATION?
• If nature restoration is not scaled up, the EEA projects a decrease in the overall level of net
removals for the period 2020-2040, with an average of 200 MtCO2e removed each year -
compared to the historic average of 300 MtCO2e for the period 1990-2019 [2]. This would
mean the EU is very likely to fail to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050.

Why is nature restoration critical for climate mitigation in the EU?
Peatlands
Peatlands cover around 3% of the EU-27 agricultural area – yet emit 25% of the EU’s annual
emissions from agricultural land [3].
WHAT CAN THE NRL ACHIEVE?
WHAT WOULD HAPPEN WITH
NO RESTORATION?
• The restoration of peatland and wetland
The IPCC estimate that if no rewetting is
Annex I habitats under Article 4 could
done, emissions from peatland would
achieve additional net GHG mitigation
take up 12-42% of the global emission
benefits between 7.8 and 22.8 million
budget needed to keep warming below
tCO2eq/year to 2030 and between 26.7 and
1.5-2°C [7].
62.9 MtCO2eq/year to 2050 [4]. The
technical mitigation potential of rewetting
and restoring all EU peatlands is much larger
– it is estimated at about 185
MtCO2eq/year, on average for the 2020-
2050 period [5].
• Rewetting 35% of the total area of
agriculturally used peatlands in the EU
under Article 9.4 will
reduce their total
emissions by 25% (around 45 Mt CO2eq)
[6].
Keava raba, Ohekatku, Rapla County, Estonia, Photo by
Single.Earth
Agroecosystems
Restoring agroecosystems can re-establish their natural carbon cycling and storage capacities -
thereby achieving climate mitigation benefits through avoiding some current emissions and
enhancing carbon sinks.
WHAT CAN THE NRL ACHIEVE?
WHAT WOULD HAPPEN WITH
• Increasing soil organic carbon stocks on
NO RESTORATION?
arable land in the EU under Article 9.2(b)
Under a business-as-usual scenario, soil
could achieve
an additional sequestration
organic carbon (SOC) is predicted to
of 50.48 million tCO2eq/year [8].
increase between 12.8 and 13.9-14.1 Gt
• The
economically
feasible
carbon
in cropland by 2050, and from 6.7 to 8.9-
sequestration potential of EU27 agricultural
9.4 Gt in pastures [5]. This is much less
soils is at least
20 million tCO2eq/year,
than what can be achieved through
whilst the maximum technically achievable
restoration.
carbon sequestration potential could be 200
million tCO2eq/year [9].
Institute for European Environmental Policy (2022)

Why is nature restoration critical for climate mitigation in the EU?
Forests
Forests are the largest carbon sink in the EU, sequestering around one tenth of Europe’s gross
CO2 emissions in 2020 [10]. They have the highest sequestration rate of any terrestrial habitat
[2]. Their natural capacities, however, are decreasing, and forests have started to become net
sources of emissions in many EU member states, due to increased harvesting, climate change,
forest fires, and pest damage [11-12]. The nature restoration law proposal also requires no
further degradation of existing forest habitats important for biodiversity (Annex I habitats), which
includes old growth forests.
Restoring, re-establishing, and adapting forest habitats to
climate change can significantly contribute to climate mitigation by increasing the forest
carbon sink and avoiding emissions.
WHAT CAN THE NRL ACHIEVE?
WHAT WOULD HAPPEN WITH
Restoring forests and making forests more
NO RESTORATION?
resilient to climate change is estimated to
Without restoration, forests’ carbon
have an
additional mitigation potential in
storage potential may decline by 180
the order of 90 to 180 million tCO2/year by
million tCO2eq annually from 2021-
2040 [13]. Recent studies estimate
2030, reducing the sink by more than
significantly larger
potentials of up to 440
50% [14]. Many forests are already
million tCO2eq/year, which could double the
becoming net sources of emissions and
climate mitigation potential of forests by 2050
this risk will increase as climate change
[4].
increases the risks of forest disasters and
as the intensity of forest management
increases.
Eibsee, Grainau, Germany, Photo by Daniel Seßler
Not all nature restoration will increase or safeguard carbon – sometimes saving
biodiversity means losing carbon but increasing long-term habitat resilience.
• On heaths, scrub habitats, and grasslands, actions that increase carbon and biomass –
planting trees or adding nutrients or letting the habitats get overgrown - can destroy their
biodiversity value.
• Restoration actions may remove carbon by cutting down trees planted on peat bogs or
heaths, clearing overgrowth on abandoned grasslands, or cutting away over-fertile soil and
vegetation.
• Restoration can prevent or minimize fire risk in these habitats, which can avoid significant
emissions in future.
Institute for European Environmental Policy (2022)

Why is nature restoration critical for climate mitigation in the EU?
Peatland restoration reduces emissions and global
warming potential of restored sites
The LIFE PEAT RESTORE project contributed to rewetting degraded peatlands
to restore their function as carbon sinks in five EU countries around the Baltic
Sea (Germany, Poland, Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia) on an area of 5,300
hectares. The preliminary results in 2021 showed that the peatland
management and restoration actions support CO2 uptake or reduction of CO2
emissions and has shown first steps of recovery towards functional peatland
ecosystems.
It is estimated that around
30% of the global warming potential of all sites
was reduced, amounting to 14,500 tons CO2eq/year [15].
Viru bog, Kolga, Harju County, Estonia, Photo by Jaanus Jagomägi
Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are
however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those
of the European Union or CINEA. Neither the European Union nor
CINEA can be held responsible for them.
These policy briefs were written by IEEP and
Ecologic Institute in the Think Sustainable
Europe Network in response to the proposed
EU nature restoration law.
Why is nature restoration critical for climate mitigation in the EU?
References
1. Kopsieker, L., G. Costa Domingo, and E. Underwood, Climate mitigation potential of large-scale restoration in Europe. Analysis of
the climate mitigation potential of restoring habitats listed in Annex I of the Habitats Directive. 2021, Institute for European
Environmental Policy.
2. EEA, Carbon stocks and sequestration in terrestrial and marine ecosystems: a lever for nature restoration? 2022, European
Environmental Agency.
3. Greifswald Mire Centre, Peatlands in the EU. Common agricultural policy (CAP) after 2020. 2020, Greifswald Mire Centre: Germany.
4. European Commission, IMPACT ASSESSMENT REPORT Accompanying the document Proposal for a Regulation of the European
Parliament and the Council amending Regulations (EU) 2018/841 as regards the scope, simplifying the compliance rules, setting
out the targets of the Member States for 2030 and committing to the collective achievement of climate neutrality by 2035 in the
land use, forestry and agriculture sector, and (EU) 2018/1999 as regards improvement in monitoring, reporting, tracking of progress
and review, in COMMISSION STAFF WORKING DOCUMENT. 2021, European Commission: Brussels.
5. Andrés, P., et al., Agricultural potential in carbon sequestration: Humus content of land used for agriculture and CO2 storage.
2022, European Parliament Policy Department for Structural and Cohesion Policies: Brussels.
6. Greifswald Mire Centre and Wetlands International, Higher ambition for peatlands in the EU Nature Restoration Law proposal.
2022, Greifswald Mire Centre and Wetlands International Europe.
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Climate Change, 2019. 9: p. 1-3.
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20 years? Global Change Biology, 2012. 18(1): p. 35-43.
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11. Booth, M.S., Burning up the carbon sink: How the EU’s forest biomass policy undermines climate mitigation, and how it can be
reformed. 2022, Partnership for Policy Integrity.
12. Statistics Finland, Greenhouse gas emissions in 2021 remained on level with the previous year, the land use sector a net source of
emissions for the first time. 2022, Statistics Finland: Helsinki, Finland.
13. Nabuurs, G.-J., et al., By 2050 the mitigation effects of EU forests could nearly double through climate smart forestry. Forests, 2017.
8(12): p. 484.
14. Seidl, R., et al., Increasing forest disturbances in Europe and their impact on carbon storage. Nature Climate Change, 2014. 4(9): p.
806-810.
15. Jurema, L., et al., Layman report LIFE Peat Restore, Restoring peatlands for climate. 2022.