“…Being able to meet the high costs involved in land restoration (approximately from US$260 to US$2,880 per hectare, depending on the condition of land and costs related to restoration methods) affects whether people managing agricultural and forest landscapes embrace such restoration efforts (Brown, ; Strassburg & Latawiec, ). With this in mind, bioenergy species, for example, nyamplung, has potential to be used as a restoration crop in agroforestry systems, offering a climate‐smart farming approach by producing bioenergy as well as the function for soil and biodiversity conservation (Baral & Lee, ; Borchard et al., ; Jaung et al., ; Maimunah et al., ; Prabakaran & Britto, ; Schweier et al., ). As such farming can bring environmental and socioeconomic benefits without sacrificing agricultural production, it proves a viable way to shift toward sustainable production and scale back unsustainable agricultural practices that may lead to further degradation and deforestation (Boucher et al., ; Brown, Robinson, French, & Reed, ; Rahman, Sunderland, et al., ; Rahman, Jacobsen, et al., ).…”