Dubai Telegraph - Restoring damaged land key to climate, biodiversity goals

EUR -
AED 4.400314
AFN 77.881147
ALL 96.814682
AMD 454.172547
ANG 2.144834
AOA 1098.729057
ARS 1730.745379
AUD 1.690809
AWG 2.158218
AZN 2.042821
BAM 1.959124
BBD 2.414607
BDT 146.498583
BGN 2.012185
BHD 0.451686
BIF 3551.270346
BMD 1.198178
BND 1.512786
BOB 8.284057
BRL 6.227767
BSD 1.198839
BTN 110.119313
BWP 15.686617
BYN 3.408698
BYR 23484.290754
BZD 2.411101
CAD 1.620506
CDF 2683.918435
CHF 0.917625
CLF 0.026186
CLP 1033.955485
CNY 8.33291
CNH 8.319544
COP 4397.74497
CRC 595.019577
CUC 1.198178
CUP 31.75172
CVE 110.45288
CZK 24.298095
DJF 213.48135
DKK 7.46704
DOP 75.429249
DZD 154.714803
EGP 56.109364
ERN 17.972671
ETB 186.414713
FJD 2.618439
FKP 0.869432
GBP 0.866031
GEL 3.229063
GGP 0.869432
GHS 13.103234
GIP 0.869432
GMD 87.466656
GNF 10519.982279
GTQ 9.197645
GYD 250.81559
HKD 9.348245
HNL 31.637684
HRK 7.534031
HTG 156.996396
HUF 379.901498
IDR 20117.410294
ILS 3.70231
IMP 0.869432
INR 110.191403
IQD 1570.47137
IRR 50473.252638
ISK 144.787493
JEP 0.869432
JMD 187.928883
JOD 0.849516
JPY 183.431525
KES 154.589225
KGS 104.78044
KHR 4819.23774
KMF 493.649685
KPW 1078.290613
KRW 1708.440222
KWD 0.367097
KYD 0.999099
KZT 604.037467
LAK 25827.933287
LBP 107356.012463
LKR 371.221447
LRD 221.78726
LSL 19.062325
LTL 3.537908
LVL 0.724766
LYD 7.528744
MAD 10.839493
MDL 20.104197
MGA 5349.076452
MKD 61.600431
MMK 2516.151613
MNT 4280.660921
MOP 9.634588
MRU 47.858006
MUR 54.097074
MVR 18.523892
MWK 2078.827408
MXN 20.521616
MYR 4.695675
MZN 76.395464
NAD 19.062325
NGN 1673.830778
NIO 44.115408
NOK 11.440744
NPR 176.1907
NZD 1.969217
OMR 0.460694
PAB 1.198834
PEN 4.011306
PGK 5.131772
PHP 70.569096
PKR 335.375273
PLN 4.204707
PYG 8050.626917
QAR 4.358915
RON 5.095247
RSD 117.400304
RUB 91.721686
RWF 1749.067864
SAR 4.49358
SBD 9.678495
SCR 17.176644
SDG 720.702641
SEK 10.541367
SGD 1.511975
SHP 0.898944
SLE 29.118971
SLL 25125.194783
SOS 683.960562
SRD 45.640962
STD 24799.867551
STN 24.541951
SVC 10.489843
SYP 13251.340431
SZL 19.054412
THB 37.190847
TJS 11.203157
TMT 4.193623
TND 3.428532
TOP 2.884925
TRY 52.020807
TTD 8.136841
TWD 37.52634
TZS 3043.372756
UAH 51.245655
UGX 4292.283258
USD 1.198178
UYU 45.36717
UZS 14504.672432
VES 429.518272
VND 31224.521278
VUV 143.387393
WST 3.265465
XAF 657.071937
XAG 0.010054
XAU 0.000214
XCD 3.238136
XCG 2.160575
XDR 0.817187
XOF 657.06919
XPF 119.331742
YER 285.649307
ZAR 18.761325
ZMK 10785.036009
ZMW 23.826529
ZWL 385.812859
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    82.4

    0%

  • CMSD

    -0.0457

    24.0508

    -0.19%

  • BTI

    -0.1800

    60.16

    -0.3%

  • BCC

    -0.8900

    80.85

    -1.1%

  • GSK

    -0.7000

    50.1

    -1.4%

  • BCE

    -0.2500

    25.27

    -0.99%

  • CMSC

    -0.1000

    23.7

    -0.42%

  • RELX

    -0.9800

    37.38

    -2.62%

  • AZN

    -2.3800

    93.22

    -2.55%

  • NGG

    0.3700

    84.68

    +0.44%

  • RIO

    0.4600

    93.37

    +0.49%

  • BP

    0.0800

    37.7

    +0.21%

  • RYCEF

    -0.5500

    16.6

    -3.31%

  • VOD

    0.0700

    14.57

    +0.48%

  • JRI

    -0.6900

    12.99

    -5.31%

Restoring damaged land key to climate, biodiversity goals
Restoring damaged land key to climate, biodiversity goals / Photo: JUAN MABROMATA - AFP/File

Restoring damaged land key to climate, biodiversity goals

Unsustainable farming is on track to increase the amount of severely degraded land by an area the size of South America by mid-century, a UN report warned Wednesday, as experts said restoration was a matter of "survival".

Text size:

Global food systems are responsible for 80 percent of deforestation and 70 percent of freshwater use, said the report.

They are also the single largest driver of species extinction, which is occurring 100 to 1,000 times more rapidly today than when human activity began to radically change the climate and degrade nature.

"The risk of widespread, abrupt or irreversible environmental change will grow," the Global Land Outlook 2 report warns.

The 40 percent of Earth's non-frozen land denatured by chemical-intensive exploitation threatens roughly half of global GDP, some $4 trillion, according to the 250-page peer-reviewed assessment, which called for action "on a crisis footing".

"How we manage and use land resources is threatening the health and continued survival of many species on Earth, including the human species," Ibrahim Thiaw, Executive Secretary of the UN convention charged with reversing land degradation told AFP.

"Business as usual is not a viable pathway for our continued survival and prosperity."

The flagship report of the UN Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) comes two weeks before the treaty's 197 parties meet for the first time in three years, in Abidjan.

Adapting to an increase in drought and transitioning to sustainable agriculture top an agenda more broadly focused on restoring the health of one of Earth's vital resources: land.

- Agriculture's 1% -

At least 70 percent of ice-free land on Earth has been converted to human use, and most of that has been degraded. That means that things do not grow as much or as well as they used to.

"There's not a lot of land left," UNCCD chief scientist Barron Orr told AFP. "And yet, we still see an accelerated rate of land use change taking place."

The report reveals a startling level of concentration in the production of food.

At one extreme, one percent of agribusinesses control 70 percent of the world's agricultural land. At the other extreme, 80 percent of farms comprise only 12 percent of all farmland.

"The solution, at least in the initial phase, is not going to be converting land back to small holders," said Orr.

"It's making sure we move large agriculture into a much more sustainable space."

- Climate and nature -

The UN Paris Agreement's cornerstone climate goal is capping global warming below two degrees Celsius, and the biodiversity convention is aiming later this year to carve out 30 percent of Earth's surface as protected areas.

For the desertification convention, the core goal is "land degradation neutrality" by 2030.

Behind the cumbersome name is a simple concept that can be summed up as "no net loss": to ensure that, by 2030, the amount of degraded land in a given country has not expanded compared to a 2015 baseline.

Previously, the international response has been bogged down in arguments about metrics.

That problem hampered progress on the Great Green Wall, an ambitious, multi-decade scheme to reclaim agricultural land from the desert along the Sahel stretching 7,000 kilometres (more than 4,000 miles) from the Atlantic Ocean to the Red Sea.

Countries could not agree on how to monitor and measure progress. But the new benchmark is far easier to apply, said Orr.

- Competing for land -

The report contrasts different development scenarios out to mid-century.

A "business-as-usual" approach would see an additional 250 billion tonnes of CO2 or its equivalent released into the atmosphere by 2050 -- roughly four times current annual greenhouse gas emissions from all sources.

But a strategy of land restoration and protection could see the opposite: some 300 billion tonnes safely stored in soil and vegetation compared to a 2015 baseline -- equivalent to five years of current emissions.

Competition for land is heating up and there will be increasingly hard choices in the future over whether to carve out land for commodity crops, growing more food, C02-absorbing plantations, or to preserve as biodiversity corridors.

"We have to really think about that much more strategically," said Orr.

The report recommends for the first time scaling up the land rights of indigenous peoples as a climate solution and to ensure the success of projects to restore nature.

But indigenous groups, often shunted aside or pushed off their traditional homelands in the past, remain wary.

"We welcome new allies to this battle, including economic actors who are increasingly interested in avoiding climate risk, but we must make clear that we will not be used for greenwashing," said Jose Gregorio Diaz Mirabal, representing 511 indigenous groups in the Amazon basin.

"Partnering with Indigenous peoples requires embracing transformative change."

H.Nadeem--DT