 My research focuses on how Indonesia can meet its COP 21 climate commitments without constraining future growth in its palm oil sector. Currently in the business as usual practices in palm oil have resulted in deforestation and peatland drainage causing forests and peatland fires resulting in enormous greenhouse gas emissions in the form of land use change and forestry emissions. The policy problem that Indonesia faces is balancing the economy and the environment. Economically palm oil is very important to Indonesia. It is its largest agriculture export worth $18 billion annually. It needs to balance that against its environmental commitments to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by 29% from business as usual. To achieve this Indonesia will need to make land use and land use change and forestry emission reductions in sectors such as palm. As these emissions constitute 60% of Indonesia's carbon emissions. I assess several policy options available to Indonesia. These include moratoriums, sustainable certification programs, stricter enforcement, agricultural policy and land use policy. I also identified several impediments to policy implementation. These include corruption, bureaucratic inefficiencies and poor quality of geospatial data all of which the government can address. I also identified geography and climate phenomenon as impediments outside of the government's purview. My recommendation is threefold. First, to stop peatland drainage as peatland is wetland and is a natural carbon sink. Therefore draining it releases enormous amounts of greenhouse gases. Two, to eliminate slash and burn which is actually illegal in Indonesia but is not strictly enforced. So I suggested stricter enforcement for multinationals and large companies and use agricultural policy to increase productivity for small holders to reduce the necessity for them to slash and burn to clear a new agricultural land. And my third recommendation is to implement national land use policy planning by using geospatial data to better plan where future palm plantation developments occur. Of course once they improve their geospatial data. So to conclude these changes amount to several years worth of greenhouse gas emission reductions and will be key to meeting Indonesia's COP 21 climate commitments. Thank you.