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Image: Palm oil plantations in Borneo as seen from orbit

Palm oil plantations
Credit: contains modified Copernicus Sentinel data (2019), processed by ESA, CC BY-SA 3.0 IGO

The Copernicus Sentinel-2 mission takes us over palm oil plantations in East Kalimantan鈥攖he Indonesian part of the island Borneo.

Palm oil is the most widely-produced tropical edible oil. It's used in a vast array of products鈥攆rom ice cream and chocolates, to cosmetics such as make up and soap, to biofuel. Not only is it versatile, palm oil is also a uniquely productive crop. Harvested all year-round, oil palm trees produce up to nine times more oil per unit area than other major oil crops.

To meet , palm oil trees are grown on vast industrial plantations鈥攍eading to acres of rainforest being cut down. Between 1980 and 2014, global palm oil production increased from 4.5 million tonnes to 70 million tonnes, and is expected to increase.

Indonesia is the largest producer of palm oil, followed by Malaysia. Together they account for 84% of the world's palm oil production.

To produce palm oil in large enough quantities to meet growing demand, farmers clear large areas of tropical rainforest to make room for palm plantations. This leads to a loss of habitat for species such as the orangutan鈥攄eclared as critically endangered by the WWF. In general, burning forests to make room for the crop is also a major source of greenhouse gas emissions.

In this image, captured on 15 February 2019, the various stages of the deforestation process are clearly visible鈥攖he green patches in the plantations are the well-established farms, while the light brown patches show the newly-harvested land. The surrounding lush rainforest is visible in dark green.

Copernicus Sentinel-2 is a , used mostly to track changes in the way land is being used, as well as monitoring the health of vegetation. Each satellite carries a high-resolution camera that images Earth's surface in 13 spectral bands.

Provided by European Space Agency

Citation: Image: Palm oil plantations in Borneo as seen from orbit (2019, July 19) retrieved 6 July 2025 from /news/2019-07-image-palm-oil-plantations-borneo.html
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