Wetland restoration for the future
Acronym
ALFAwetlands
Description of the granted funding
Wetlands cover 5-8% of the world’s land area and have a huge capacity to sequester carbon (C). Healthy wetlands accumulate C effectively due to water-logged conditions promoting highly stable C content. The EU aims to cut GHG emissions by at least 55% by 2030.This ambition requires new GHG mitigation measures within all sectors including LULUCF sector, where wetlands as C rich ecosystem can contribute to efficiently to both EU's climate targets and biodiversity strategy. Currently there is still a high uncertainty prevails of wetlands’ spatial and C sink extent, as well as source estimates and sustainable alternatives in restoration. This hinders the efficient use of wetlands in C mitigation and adaptation in the context of other LULUCF mitigation options. We will advance the state-of-the-art on the geospatial knowledge base on wetlands and their use and degradation in Europe. We will apply a co-creation approach to develop procedural knowledge and find ways for integrating multiple targets, supporting more inclusive, community-based approaches to wetland restoration. Diverse novel experimental data on ecosystems’ responses to wetlands’ management and restoration regimes under different types of land-use and will be acquired and synthesised on biodiversity and other ecosystem services (BES). At the local level, Living Labs (LL) support and integrate interdisciplinary and multi-actor research on ecological, environmental, economic, and social issues. Models will be utilised to scale up experimental data from LLs, to gain an understanding of the potential impacts of upscaled wetland restoration options on BES provision, as well as changes in BES provision at the EU level for various policy-relevant time periods and the most policy-relevant CC mitigation and BD targets. We will assess the societal impacts of wetland restoration, especially on BES benefits and costs of different restoration approaches and wellbeing impacts at local, national, and EU levels.
Show moreStarting year
2022
End year
2026
Granted funding
EUROPEAN CHAPTER OF THE SOCIETY FOR ECOLOGICAL RESTORATION SER INTERNATIONAL (BE)
55 600 €
Third party
MICHAEL SUCCOW STIFTUNG ZUM SCHUTZDER NATUR (DE)
942 500 €
Participant
WETLANDS INTERNATIONAL - EUROPEAN ASSOCIATION (NL)
99 985 €
Participant
EUROPEAN WILDERNESS SOCIETY, VEREINZUM SCHUTZ DER EUROPAISCHEN WILDNIS (AT)
464 470 €
Participant
LATVIJAS VALSTS MEZZINATNES INSTITUTS SILAVA (LV)
429 831 €
Participant
EIGEN VERMOGEN VAN HET INSTITUUT VOOR NATUUR- EN BOSONDERZOEK (BE)
547 546 €
Participant
CENTRO DE INVESTIGACION ECOLOGICA Y APLICACIONES FORESTALES (ES)
368 500 €
Participant
INTERNATIONALES INSTITUT FUER ANGEWANDTE SYSTEMANALYSE (AT)
584 062 €
Participant
STOCKHOLMS UNIVERSITET (SE)
406 436 €
Participant
TARTU ULIKOOL (EE)
629 036 €
Participant
UNIVERSITAT DE BARCELONA (ES)
304 353 €
Participant
INSTITUT NATIONAL DE LA RECHERCHE AGRONOMIQUE (FR)
247 696 €
Participant
CENTRE NATIONAL DE LA RECHERCHE SCIENTIFIQUE CNRS (FR)
439 827 €
Participant
Amount granted
7 967 115 €
Funder
European Union
Funding instrument
HORIZON Research and Innovation Actions
Framework programme
Horizon Europe (HORIZON)
Call
Programme part
Climate, Energy and Mobility (11715 Climate Science and Solutions (11716 )
Topic
Restoration of natural wetlands, peatlands and floodplains as a strategy for fast mitigation benefits; pathways, trade-offs and co-benefits (HORIZON-CL5-2021-D1-01-08Call ID
HORIZON-CL5-2021-D1-01 Other information
Funding decision number
101056844
Identified topics
biodiversity, ecosystems