Mangrove forests, among the most carbon-dense ecosystems on Earth, are exhibiting a statistically significant net increase in global coverage for the first time in decades. A new analysis, published today in Nature Sustainability, attributes this reversal to a combination of natural regeneration and targeted restoration, with a UK-led initiative in Southeast Asia emerging as a paradigm for coastal rewilding.
The study, compiled by an international consortium including the University of Cambridge and the UN Environment Programme, used satellite data from 1996 to 2023 to track mangrove extent across 112 countries. The headline result: a net gain of roughly 2,100 square kilometres globally, a 1.4% increase relative to 1996 baselines. This is equivalent to absorbing an additional 3.2 million tonnes of CO2 annually, roughly the emissions of 700,000 cars.
"These forests are the kidneys of the coastlines, filtering pollutants and buffering storm surges," said Dr. Helena Vance, Science and Climate Correspondent. "The data show that when we remove pressures like aquaculture and timber extraction, mangroves can bounce back within a decade. The key is stopping the bleeding first."
The standout success story is the Mekong Delta Mangrove Restoration Project, co-funded by the UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office and the Vietnamese government. The project, active since 2017, has restored 12,400 hectares of degraded mangroves by replanting native species and re-establishing natural hydrology. More importantly, it paired restoration with alternative livelihoods for local communities, such as clam farming and ecotourism, reducing the incentive for illegal charcoal production.
"You cannot ask people to stop cutting mangroves if they have no alternative income," said Tran Thi Lan, the project's lead ecologist, in an interview. "We provided training for sustainable aquaculture, and within three years, illegal felling dropped by 80%." The carbon credits generated by the restored mangroves are now being sold on voluntary markets, providing a revenue stream to maintain the reserves.
Globally, the net gain is not evenly distributed. Indonesia, the country with the largest mangrove area, reported a 3.2% increase (roughly 800 square kilometres) due to reduced shrimp farming encroachment. Brazil and Mexico also showed gains. Conversely, Myanmar and Madagascar continued to lose coverage due to agricultural expansion and cyclone damage, though at slower rates than in the previous decade.
The Australian government, in a separate announcement today, committed $80 million to expand its blue carbon market, aiming to incentivize mangrove protection across the Torres Strait. "Blue carbon ecosystems punch above their weight in terms of sequestration per hectare," said Australian Environment Minister Tanya Plibersek. "Protecting mangroves is a cost-effective climate solution."
Critics caution that net gain does not mean the crisis is over. "The majority of restored sites are young and vulnerable," said Dr. Vance. "A single Category 5 cyclone could wipe out years of progress in the Caribbean. We also need to preserve old-growth mangroves, which hold ten times more carbon than new plantations."
Nevertheless, the positive trend offers a rare piece of encouraging news in a landscape of biodiversity decline. The World Wildlife Fund, which maintains the Mangrove Restoration Tracker, confirmed that the rate of loss has declined by 35% since the 2010s, largely due to policy changes in shrimp farming regulations in Vietnam and Thailand.
The UK project now serves as a template for a $200 million global initiative announced at the COP28 summit last December, aiming to restore 1 million hectares of mangroves by 2030. If the Mekong model holds, the prognosis for coastal ecosystems may be better than previously thought.
The data is clear: while the planet warms and ice melts, in the muddy intertidal zones, a natural resilience is taking hold. It is not a solution in itself, but it is a start.








