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Street Roots • October 20-26, 2017 News Page 7 Nature: On the verge of bankruptcy In a recent UN-sponsored report, the scale o f desertification and drought occurring across the globe is highlighted BY BAHER KAMAL C O N T R IB U T IN G W R IT E R ressures on global land resources are now greater than ever, as a rapidly increasing population coupled with rising levels of consumption is placing ever- larger demands on the world’s land-based natural capital, warns a new United Nations report. Consumption of Earth’s natural reserves has doubled in the last 30 years, with a third of the planet’s land now severely degraded, according to the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD). Its new report launched Sept. 12 in Ordos, China, during the convention’s 13th summit. “Each year, we lose 15 billion trees and 24 billion tonnes of fertile soil,” the UNCCD’s report, “The Global Land Outlook,” stated, adding that a significant proportion of managed and natural ecosystems are degrading and at further risk from climate change and biodiversity loss. In basic terms, there is increasing competition between the demand for goods and services that benefit people, like food, water and energy, and the need to protect other ecosystem services that regulate and Carcasses o f goats a n d sheep are seen Dec. 15 in the outskirts o f D ahar town o f P untland state in northeastern Somalia. support all life on Earth. At the same time, terrestrial biodiversity and highly-mechanized agribusiness. breakdown. In this regard, land degradation South Asia, the Middle East and North underpins all of these services and This widening gulf between production can be considered a ‘threat amplifier,’ Africa will face the greatest challenges due underwrites the full enjoyment of a wide and consumption, and ensuing levels of food especially when it slowly reduces people’s to a mix of factors, including high range of human rights, such as the rights to loss/waste, further accelerates the rate of ability to use the land for food production population growth, low per capita GDP, a healthy life, nutritious food, clean water, land use change, land degradation and and water storage or undermines other vital limited options for agricultural expansion, and cultural identity, adds the report. And a deforestation, warns the U.N. Convention. ecosystem services. increased water stress and high biodiversity significant proportion of managed and Speaking at the launch of the report, Meanwhile, climate change will alter the losses. natural ecosystems are degrading and at UNCCD Executive Secretary Monique suitability of vast regions for food The big question is if this self-destructive further risk from climate change and Barbut said, “Land degradation and drought production and human habitation, according trend can be reversed. The answer is yes, or biodiversity loss. are global challenges and intimately linked to the report. at least that losses could be minimized. The report provides some key facts: From to most, if not all, aspects of human security “The mass extinction of flora and fauna, On this, Barbut said that the U.N. 1998 to 2013, approximately 20 percent of and well-being - food security, employment including the loss of crop wild relatives and Convention report suggests, “It is in all our Earth’s vegetated land surface showed and migration, in particular.” keystone species that hold ecosystems interests to step back and rethink how we persistent declining trends in productivity, As the competition increases, there are together, further jeopardizes resilience and are managing the pressures and the apparent in 20 percent of cropland, 16 winners and losers. adaptive capacity, particularly for the rural competition.” percent of forest land, 19 percent of According the U.N. Convention, land is an poor who depend most on the land for their She further added, “The Outlook grassland and 27 percent of rangeland. essential building block of civilization yet its basic needs and livelihoods,” it states. presents a vision for transforming the way These trends are “especially alarming” in contribution to our quality of life is Our food system, UNCCD warns, has put in which we use and manage land because the face of the increased demand for land perceived and valued in starkly different and the focus on short-term production and we are all decision-makers and our choices intensive crops and livestock. often incompatible ways. profit rather than long-term environmental can make a difference - even small steps Land degradation contributes to climate A minority has grown rich from the sustainability. matter.” change and increases the vulnerability of unsustainable use and large-scale The modern agricultural system has Programme Administrator Achim Steiner exploitation of land resources with related millions of people, especially the poor, resulted in huge increases in productivity, stated, “Over 250 million people are directly conflicts intensifying in many countries, women and children, says UNCCD, adding holding off the risk of famine in many parts affected by desertification, and about one UNCCD states. that current management practices in the of the world but, at the same time, is based billion people in over 100 countries are at Except for some regions in Europe, land-use sector are responsible for about 25 on monocultures, genetically modified risk.” human use of land before the mid-1700s was percent of the world’s greenhouses gases, crops, and the intensive use of fertilizers They include many of the world’s poorest insignificant when compared with while land degradation is both a cause and a and pesticides that undermine long-term and most marginalized people, he said, contemporary changes in the Earth’s sustainability, it adds. result of poverty. adding that achieving land degradation ecosystems, UNCCD notes, adding that the Food production accounts for 70 percent “Over 1.3 billion people, mostly in the neutrality can provide a healthy and notion of a limitless, human-dominated of all freshwater withdrawals and 80 percent developing countries, are trapped on productive life for all on Earth, including world was embraced and reinforced by of deforestation, while soil, the basis for degrading agricultural land, exposed to water and food security. scientific advances: “Populations abruptly global food security, is being contaminated, climate stress, and therefore excluded from The Global Land Outlook shows that gained access to what seemed to be an degraded and eroded in many areas, wider infrastructure and economic “each of us can in fact make a difference.” unlimited stock of natural capital, where resulting in long-term declines in Can Mother Nature recover? The answer development,” stated the report. land was seen as a free gift of nature.” productivity. is a clear yes. Perhaps it would suffice that Land degradation also triggers The scenario analysis examines a range of In parallel, small-scale farmers, the competition for scarce resources, which can politicians pay more attention to real human possible futures and projects increasing backbone of rural livelihoods and food real needs than promoting weapons deals — lead to migration and insecurity while tension between the need to increase food and that big business helps replenish the exacerbating access and income inequalities, production for millennia, are under and energy production and declines. immense strain from land degradation, world’s natural capital. the report stated. From a regional perspective, these insecure tenure and a globalized food “Soil erosion, desertification and water scenarios predict that sub-Saharan Africa, Courtesy o f Inter Press Service / INSP.ngo system that favors concentrated, large-scale scarcity all contribute to societal stress and P