Latvia Latvia has been the biggest exporter of peat in the world by volume, providing more than 19.9% of the world's volume, followed only by
Canada with 13% in 2022. In 2020, Latvia exported 1.97 million tons of peat, followed by
Germany with 1.5 and
Canada with 1.42 million tons. Nevertheless, although first in the world by volume, in monetary terms, Latvian comes second in the world behind
Canada. As an example, Latvia's income from exports was US$237 million. Due to its climate, Latvia has several peat bogs, which account for 9.9% of the country's territory. More than two thirds of the licensed areas for peat extraction are state-owned; 55% belong to the state whilst 23% belong to the municipalities Bogs in Latvia are considered important habitats due to their ecological values, and up to 128,000 hectares, or 40% of the areas in the territory, are protected by environmental laws. Also, agricultural and forestry-drained peat bogs actively release more CO2 annually than is released in peat energy production in Finland. The average regrowth rate of a single peat bog, however, is indeed slow, from 1,000 up to 5,000 years. Furthermore, it is a common practice to forest used peat bogs instead of giving them a chance to renew. This leads to lower levels of CO2 storage than the original peat bog. At 106 g CO2/
MJ, the carbon dioxide emissions of peat are higher than those of coal (at 94.6 g CO2/MJ) and
natural gas (at 56.1). According to one study, increasing the average amount of wood in the fuel mixture from the current 2.6% to 12.5% would take the emissions down to 93 g CO2/MJ. That said, little effort is being made to achieve this. The International Mire Conservation Group (IMCG) in 2006 urged the local and national governments of Finland to protect and conserve the remaining pristine peatland ecosystems. This includes the cessation of drainage and peat extraction in intact mire sites and the abandoning of current and planned groundwater extraction that may affect these sites. A proposal for a Finnish peatland management strategy was presented to the government in 2011, after a lengthy consultation phase.
Sweden , Sweden About 15% of the land in
Sweden is covered by peatlands. Whilst nowadays the main use of such soils is for
forestry, peat-rich lands have historically been exploited to produce energy, agricultural land and horticultural substrates.
Ireland in the Irish Midlands: The 'turf' in the foreground is machine-produced for domestic use. In
Ireland, a state-owned company called was responsible for managing peat extraction. It processed the extracted peat into milled peat used in power stations and sold processed peat fuel in the form of peat
briquettes, which is used for domestic heating. These are oblong bars of densely compressed, dried, and shredded peat.
Peat moss is a manufactured product for garden cultivation. Turf (dried-out peat
sods) is also commonly used in rural areas. In January 2021, Bord na Móna announced that it had ceased all peat harvesting and cutting operations and would move its business to a climate solutions company. In 2022, selling peat for burning was prohibited, but some people are still allowed to cut and burn it.
Russia .
Russia has the largest
peat power capacity in the world.|left,
Russia The use of peat for energy production was prominent in the
Soviet Union, especially in 1965. In 1929, over 40% of the Soviet Union's electric energy came from peat, which dropped to 1% by 1980. In the 1960s, larger sections of swamps and bogs in Western Russia were drained for agricultural and mining purposes.
Netherlands Two-and-a-half thousand years ago, the area now named the
Netherlands was largely covered with peat. Drainage, causing compaction and oxidation and excavation have reduced peatlands (> peat) to about or 10% of the land area, mostly used as meadows. Drainage and excavation have lowered the surface of the peatlands. In the west of the country, dikes and mills were built, creating
polders so that dwelling and economic activities could
continue below sea level, the
first polder probably in 1533 and the last one in
1968. Peat harvesting could continue in suitable locations as the lower layers below the current sea level are exposed. This peat was deposited before the sea level rise in the
Holocene. As a result, approximately 26% of the area and 21% of the population of the Netherlands are presently below sea level. The deepest point is in the
Zuidplaspolder,
below average sea level. In 2020, the Netherlands imported 2,156 million kg of peat (5.39 million m3 [400 kg/m3 dry peat]): 44.5% from Germany (2020), 9.5% from Estonia (2018), 9.2% from Latvia (2020), 7.2% from Ireland (2018), 8.0% from Sweden (2019), 6.5% from Lithuania (2020), 5.1% from Belgium (2019) and 1.7% from Denmark (2019); 1.35 million kg was exported. Most is used in gardening and
greenhouse horticulture. Since the Netherlands did not have many trees to use as firewood or charcoal, one use the Dutch made of the available peat was to fire kilns to make pottery. During World War II, the Dutch Resistance came up with an unusual use for peat. Since peat was so available in the fields, resistance fighters sometimes stacked peat into human-sized piles and used the piles for target practice.
Estonia After
oil shale in Estonia, peat is the second-most-mined natural resource. The peat production sector has a yearly revenue of around €100 million and it is mostly export-oriented. Peat is extracted from around .
India Sikkim The mountains of the Himalayas and Tibetan Plateau contain pockets of high-altitude wetlands.
Khecheopalri is one of the
Sikkim's most famous and diverse peatlands in the eastern Indian territory of Sikkim, which includes 682 species representing five kingdoms, 196 families and 453 genera.
United Kingdom England England has around 1 million acres of peatland. Peatlands in England store 584m tonnes of carbon in total but emit around 11 million tonnes of every year due to degradation and draining. In 2021 only 124 people owned 60% of England's peatland. The
extraction of peat from the
Somerset Levels began during the Roman times and has been carried out since the Levels were first drained. On
Dartmoor, there were several commercial distillation plants formed and run by the British Patent Naphtha Company in 1844. These produced
naphtha on a commercial scale from the high-quality local peat.
Fenn's, Whixall and Bettisfield Mosses is an element of a post-
Ice Age peat bog that straddles the England–
Wales border and contains many rare plant and animal species due to the acidic environment created by the peat. Only lightly hand-dug, it is now a
national nature reserve and is being restored to its natural condition. The industrial extraction of peat occurred at the
Thorne Moor site, outside
Doncaster near the village of
Hatfield. Government policy incentivised commercial removal to peat for agricultural use. This caused much destruction of the area during the 1980s. The removal of the peat resulted in later flooding further downstream at
Goole due to the loss of water retaining peatlands. Recently regeneration of peatland has occurred as part of the Thorne Moors project, and at
Fleet Moss, organised by
Yorkshire Wildlife Trust.
Northern Ireland In
Northern Ireland, there is small-scale domestic turf cutting in rural areas, but areas of bogs have been diminished because of changes in agriculture. In response,
afforestation has seen the establishment of tentative steps towards conservation such as
Peatlands Park,
County Armagh which is an
Area of Special Scientific Interest.
Scotland on the
Isle of Lewis (
Scotland) Some
Scotch whisky distilleries, such as those on
Islay, use peat fires to dry malted
barley. The drying process takes about 30 hours. This gives the whiskies a distinctive smoky flavour, often called "peatiness". The peatiness, or degree of peat flavour, of a whisky is calculated in
ppm of
phenol. Normal Highland whiskies have a peat level of up to 30 ppm, and the whiskies on Islay usually have up to 50 ppm. In rare types like the
Octomore, the whisky can have more than 100 ppm of phenol. Scotch Ales can also use peat-roasted malt, imparting a similar smoked flavor. Because they are easily compressed under minimal weight, peat deposits pose significant difficulties for building structures, roads and railways. When the
West Highland railway line was constructed across
Rannoch Moor in western Scotland, its builders had to float the tracks on a multi-thousand-ton mattress of tree roots, brushwood, earth and ash.
Wales Wales has over 70,000 hectares of peatlands. Most of it is blanket peat bog in the highlands, but there are a few hundred hectares of peatland in lowland areas. Some peatland areas in Wales are in poor condition. In 2020, the Welsh Government established a five-year peatland restoration initiative, which will be implemented by
Natural Resources Wales (NRW).
Canada There are 294 million acres of peatland in Canada, with approximately 43,500 acres in production and another 34,500 acres involved in past production. The current and past acreage in production amounts to 0.03 percent of Canada's peatland. Canada is the top exporter of peat by value. In 2021, top exporters of peat (including peat litter), whether or not agglomerated, were Canada ($580,591.39K, 1,643,950,000 kg), European Union ($445,304.42K, 2,362,280,000 kg), Latvia ($275,459.14K, 2,184,860,000 kg), Netherlands ($235,250.84K, 1,312,850,000 kg), Germany ($223,414.66K, 1,721,170,000 kg). ==See also==