Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Fighting desertific­ation and saving deserts

- Bharati Chaturvedi letters@hindustant­imes.com ■ The writer is Founder and Director, Chintan Environmen­tal Research and Action Group

Now that the COP14 on desertific­ation has ended, let’s think about our own, Indian deserts. These are dry, fragile eco-systems, oozing wonderment. Everything adapts to being water scarce. Trees are

rare, but welcome. Grasses, thorny shrubs, sand-these are home to thousands of creaturess­everal unique snakes, birds, animals and plants. The desert sometimes blooms, and it is short, ethereal and a celebratio­n of a place teeming with life.

This is the opposite of desertific­ation, the tragedy that happens when a natural eco-system turns sterile in the context in which it was to flourish. A rich forest may be reduced to a barren hill, or, even, a sparse cold desert turned into a green grove. Both these will cease to be the homes they once were for bio-diversity, and one could call them alien in their own context.

This is why we need to start talking of what constitute­s the greens? We know that parts of Leh were greened, and that was presented as a success.

In reality, it’s a disaster, because a unique ecosystem was desertifie­d in the real sense of the word. We also know the term wastelands is highly misleading, because it often refers to open areas, grasslands, commons, pastures and so on.

That’s why, when policies talk of reclaiming wastelands in some way or the other, we need to see what spaces they are really talking about and point out the wasteland fallacy.

This doesn’t mean India’s not in desertific­ation danger.

It is - almost 30 percent of it is threatened. Let’s therefore focus on fighting desertific­ation but conserving deserts.

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