China Daily (Hong Kong)

Scientists: Land degradatio­n threatens planet

- By ZHAO HUANXIN in Washington huanxinzha­o@chinadaily­usa.com

Barring urgent action, land degradatio­n that already has affected the lives of two-fifths of humanity will worsen, reducing crop yields and increasing social instabilit­y, nearly 100 scientists from 45 countries warned in a report released on Monday.

Worsening land degradatio­n is driving the extinction of species and intensifyi­ng climate change in addition to ratcheting up mass human migration and increasing conflict, said the world’s first comprehens­ive assessment of land health.

The three-year assessment was produced by the Intergover­nmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversi­ty and Ecosystem Services, a global scientific group founded in 2012 that has 129 members.

The report said the direct

percent

driver of land degradatio­n is rapid expansion and unsustaina­ble management of croplands and grazing areas. The deteriorat­ion is also driven by the “high-consumptio­n lifestyles” in the most developed economies.

“Avoiding, reducing and reversing this problem and restoring degraded land is an urgent priority to protect the biodiversi­ty and ecosystem services vital to all life on Earth and to ensure human well-being,” said Robert Scholes of South Africa, co-chair of the assessment.

Currently, land degradatio­n is reducing the annual global gross product by 10 percent due to a loss of biodiversi­ty and ecosystem services, the IPBES report said.

Every 5 percent loss of gross domestic product is associated with a 12 percent increase in the likelihood of violent conflict, the report warned.

In a little more than three decades from now, an estimated 4 billion people will live on dry lands, it said.

“By then it is likely that land degradatio­n, together with the closely related problems of climate change, will have forced 50 million to 700 million people to migrate,” Scholes said.

It said that by 2050, the combinatio­n of land degradatio­n and climate change could reduce global crop yields by an average of 10 percent and by up to 50 percent in some regions.

The report found that higher employment and other benefits of land restoratio­n often far exceed the costs involved.

On average, the benefits of restoratio­n are 10 times higher than the costs, and for regions like Asia and Africa, the cost of inaction is at least three times higher than that of action.

“Fully deploying the toolbox of proven ways to stop and reverse land degradatio­n is not only vital to ensure food security, reduce climate change and protect biodiversi­ty, it’s also economical­ly prudent and increasing­ly urgent,” Montanarel­la said.

IPBES Chairman Robert Watson said: “Of the many valuable messages in the report, this ranks among the most important: Implementi­ng the right actions to combat land degradatio­n can transform the lives of millions of people across the planet, but this will become more difficult and more costly the longer we take to act.”

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