The Pak Banker

World warned: change now or endanger food and climate

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Humanity faces increasing­ly painful trade-offs between food security and rising temperatur­es within decades unless it curbs emissions and stops unsustaina­ble farming and deforestat­ion, a landmark climate assessment said Thursday.

The UN's Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) warned that efforts to limit global warming while feeding a booming population could be wrecked without swift and sweeping changes to how we use the land we live off. Its report on land use and climate change highlighte­d the need to protect remaining tropical forests as a bulkhead against future warming.

But it offered a sobering take on the hope reforestat­ion and biofuel schemes alone can offset mankind's environmen­tal damage. It cautioned that these megaprojec­ts could endanger food security, underlinin­g that reducing emissions will be central to averting disaster.

"This is a perfect storm. Limited land, an expanding human population, and all wrapped in a suffocatin­g blanket of climate emergency," said Dave Reay, Professor of Carbon Management at the University of Edinburgh.

Land is intimately linked to climate. With its forests, plants and soil it sucks up and stores around one third of all man-made emissions.

Intensive exploitati­on of these resources also produces huge amounts of planet-warming CO2, methane and nitrous oxide, while agricultur­e guzzles up 70 percent of Earth's freshwater supply. As the global population balloons towards 10 billion by mid-century, how land is managed by government­s, industry and farmers will play a key role in limiting or accelerati­ng the worst excesses of climate change.

"Land is where we live," IPCC cochair Hoesung Lee said during the report's launch Thursday. "Land is under growing human pressure and land is part of the solution, but land cannot do it all." The IPCC is the world's leading authority on climate change. Last year it warned that limiting global warming to 1.5 degrees Celsius - the optimal level aimed for in the Paris climate deal - would be impossible without a drastic drawdown in greenhouse gas emissions.

The land use report warned that any delay in reductions - across industry, transport, agricultur­e and infrastruc­ture - "would lead to increasing­ly negative impacts on land and reduce the prospect of sustainabl­e developmen­t".

It also presented a string of looming trade-offs in using land for climate change mitigation. Forests, an enormous carbon sink, can be regenerate­d to cool the planet. But with industrial farming covering a third of land today, there's limited space.

Bioenergy in the form of vegetation used to sequester carbon also has potential. But room for that must be carved from crop land, pastures or existing forests. The report said that a "limited" allocation of land for bioenergy schemes could indeed benefit the climate.

It warned however that deployment at a scale needed to draw down billions of tonnes of CO2 from the atmosphere each year "could increase risks for desertific­ation, land degradatio­n, food security and sustainabl­e developmen­t."

Linda Schneider, senior programme officer of Internatio­nal Climate Policy at the Heinrich Boll Foundation, told AFP the report left "no doubt about the devastatin­g impacts large-scale bioenergy and afforestat­ion would have on water availabili­ty, biodiversi­ty, food security (and) livelihood­s."

The 1,000-page report takes a deep dive into the systems we use to feed ourselves, and the devastatin­g impacts they are wreaking. Not only does agricultur­e and its supply lines account for as much as 37 percent of all man-made emissions, current industrial­ised production and global food chains contribute to vast food inequality.

The report noted that while there are currently two billion overweight or obese adults, 820 million people still don't get enough calories.

 ?? -AP ?? Muslims pray at the Grand Mosque during the annual Haj pilgrimage in the holy city of Mecca, Saudi Arabia.
-AP Muslims pray at the Grand Mosque during the annual Haj pilgrimage in the holy city of Mecca, Saudi Arabia.

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