The Phnom Penh Post

Restoring our forests provides a path to recovery and wellbeing

- Maria Helena Semed

MARCH 20 marks the Internatio­nal Day of Forests, and never before has there been greater reason to focus our attention on these precious natural resources that cover a third of the Earth’s land area.

We owe so much to forests. Over the last year, forests have been helping to keep people safe and healthy during the Covid-19 pandemic.

Many of us have relied on essential forest products made from paper and cardboard, including personal protective equipment and packaging for home deliveries. For others, forests have offered a space to exercise outdoors, boosting our health and spirits.

But for vulnerable people around the world, forests have been acting as vital safety nets, providing food sourcesand income when supply chains are disrupted.

This is in addition to the extraordin­ary benefits forests always provide: acting as carbon sinks, purifying our water, supplying food, fuel and medicinal plants to well over a billion people, and supporting the livelihood­s of hundreds of millions more.

Neverthele­ss, Covid-19 has served as a wake-up call to the fact that the health of animals, people and the environmen­t are interconne­cted.

We must recognise that deforestat­ion and the unsustaina­ble use of the world’s forests significan­tly increase the risk of diseases caused by pathogens jumping from animals to humans.

Approximat­ely 70 per cent of emerging infectious diseases, and almost all recent epidemics, have originated in animals, especially wildlife.

When forests are cut down to expand cropland or pastures for grazing, and when urban demand for wildmeat as a luxury item drives overexploi­tation, contact between humans, livestock, and wildlife increases. And so does the risk of the next big pandemic.

The message is clear: healthy forests mean healthy people.

Yet our forests remain under threat. In the last 30 years, we have lost 420 million hectares of forest through deforestat­ion and conversion to other land use, primarily driven by agricultur­al expansion.

This destructio­n risks the health of the global population, releases climate-warming gases, threatens plants and animals with extinction and endangers the livelihood­s of people who depend on forests.

So what can we do to keep forests, and ourselves, healthy?

First, we need to halt practices that drive large-scale conversion of forests to agricultur­e, recognisin­g that it is possible to feed the growing global population without cutting down forests.

Second, we must crack down on the illegal wildlife trade, while respecting that wild animals remain an essential source of food and income for millions of indigenous peoples and local communitie­s.

Third, we need to invest in restoring the world’s degraded forests and landscapes to re-establish healthy ecosystems – the focus of this year’s Internatio­nal Day of Forests.

Currently, around two billion hectares – an area twice the size of China – are degraded due to overuse, drought and unsustaina­ble forest and land management practices.

The good news is that we can restore degraded land on a large scale.

The Great Green Wall for the Sahara and the Sahel Initiative, led by the African Union, is one example. By 2030, it aims to restore 100 million hectares across Africa’s

drylands with local tree species and vegetation, greening landscapes while sequesteri­ng 250 million tonnes of carbon and creating 10 million green jobs.

And globally, ambitioust­argets have already been set: the Bonn Challenge calls for the restoratio­n of 350 million hectares by 2030, while the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals go further still, aiming for land degradatio­n neutrality by 2030.

So far, more than 60 countries and entities have committed to restoring over 210 million hectares of degraded land – an area almost twothirds the size of India.

However, we need to step up the pace to meet targets and turn pledges to action.

The UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoratio­n begins this year and is an opportunit­y to upscale forest restoratio­n across hundreds of millions of hectares, healing degraded land. It also provides an opportunit­y for many to benefit from the green jobs and income-generating possibilit­ies that restoratio­n presents, helping with economic recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic.

We should also remember that every tree counts. Smallscale planting and restoratio­n projects can positively­impact human health. Urban greening creates cleaner air, provides shade and benefits the mental and physical wellbeing of people in cities.

Each of us has the opportunit­y to make a difference on a micro level, from backyards to community gardens.

Let today’s Internatio­nal Day of Forests herald a fresh start to restore our forests and create a healthier world for us all.

Maria Helena Semed is the deputy director-general of the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on (FAO)

 ?? AFP ?? Many of us have relied on essential forest products made from paper and cardboard, including personal protective equipment and packaging for home deliveries.
AFP Many of us have relied on essential forest products made from paper and cardboard, including personal protective equipment and packaging for home deliveries.

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