Albuquerque Journal

How to slow down global warming for $300 billion

Restore degraded soil to lock up carbon, U.N. scientists urge

- BY ADAM MAJENDIE AND PRATIK PARIJA BLOOMBERG

$300 billion. That’s the money needed to stop the rise in greenhouse gases and buy up to 20 years of time to fix global warming, according to United Nations climate scientists. It’s the gross domestic product of Chile, or the world’s military spending every 60 days.

The sum is not to fund green technologi­es or finance a moonshot solution to emissions, but to use simple, age-old practices to lock millions of tons of carbon back into an overlooked and over-exploited resource: the soil.

“We have lost the biological function of soils. We have got to reverse that,” said Barron J. Orr, lead scientist for the U.N. Convention to Combat Desertific­ation. “If we do it, we are turning the land into the big part of the solution for climate change.”

Rene Castro Salazar, an assistant director general at the U.N. Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on, said that of the 2 billion hectares of land around the world that has been degraded by misuse, overgrazin­g, deforestat­ion and other largely human factors, almost 5 billion acres could be restored.

Returning that land to pasture, food crops or trees would convert enough carbon into biomass to stabilize emissions of CO2, the biggest greenhouse gas, for 15 to 20 years, giving the world time to adopt carbonneut­ral technologi­es.

“With political will and investment of about $300 billion, it is doable,” Castro Salazar said. We would be “using the least-cost options we have, while waiting for the technologi­es in energy and transporta­tion to mature and be fully available in the market. It will stabilize the atmospheri­c changes, the fight against climate change, for 15-20 years. We very much need that.”

The heart of the idea is to tackle the growing problem of desertific­ation -- the degradatio­n of dry land to the point where it can support little life. At least a third of the world’s land has been degraded to some extent, directly affecting the lives of 2 billion people, said Eduardo Mansur, director of the land and water division at the FAO.

Marginal lands are being stressed around the globe by the twin phenomena of accelerate­d climate change and a rate of population growth that could lift the global tally to almost 10 billion people by 2050, he said. Much of that growth is in areas such as SubSaharan Africa and South Asia, where land is already highly stressed.

“The idea is to put more carbon into the soil,” said Orr. “That’s not going to be a simple thing because of the natural conditions. But keeping the carbon in the soil and getting that natural vegetation, grazing land etc. thriving again — that’s the key.”

Restoratio­n pledge

Last month, at a U.N. conference on desertific­ation in New Delhi, 196 countries plus the European Union agreed to a declaratio­n that each country would adopt measures needed to restore unproducti­ve land by 2030. The U.N. team has used satellite imaging and other data to identify the degraded land that could be realistica­lly restored. In many cases, the revitalize­d areas could benefit the local community and host country through increased food supply, tourism and other commercial uses.

Key to returning dry lands to vegetation is the use of fertilizer, said Mansur. “Fertilizer­s are essential for increasing productivi­ty. Good fertilizer in the right quantity is very good for the soil.”

But decades of poor agricultur­al practices in both rich and poor nations have resulted in misuse, either from using the wrong products, using too much fertilizer, or in some areas using too little so that the soil loses its nutrients.

“The problem unfortunat­ely is big and it is growing,” said Mansur. “The main cause of emissions from agricultur­e is poor land management. But the solutions are known: Sustainabl­e land management, sustainabl­e water management, sustainabl­e soil management.”

Reversing damage

Mansur stresses that the problem isn’t about reclaiming desert, but restoring wasteland that was productive before human interventi­on.

“Don’t mix desertific­ation with desert,” he said. “A desert is an ecosystem. There are deserts on the planet that have to be preserved.”

Nor is it merely a matter of planting trees, since each area has to be considered in terms of the people who live there and how they can live on the land sustainabl­y.

Kenya, for example plans to plant 2 billion trees to restore 10% of its forest cover, but it is also working on ways to adapt to the changes in climate.

We have to improve our livestock and crops to be drought resistant or drought tolerant,” said Kennedy Ondimu, director of environmen­tal planning and research at the country’s Environmen­t Ministry. “We have to look at developing our indigenous vegetables and indigenous livestock gene bank apart from embracing hybrid crop varieties and livestock varieties. We need to prioritize animal breeding.”

In Costa Rica, farmers are using deforested land to produce CO2 neutral coffee, which commands premium prices among consumers. The nation is also replanting rainforest to encourage eco-tourism, which has become the country’s second-biggest earner.

Still, the tide of desertific­ation won’t be easy to turn. In India, more than 20% of the country is considered wasteland, and scant water resources are making the situation worse.

In Chile, the government is spending $138 million improving irrigation as the region’s driest decade on record forces fruit farmers to migrate south to escape the advancing desert.

Yet, Castro Salazar says dozens of countries are fighting back with programs designed to reverse the loss of farmland, and at least 20 nations have major efforts underway to replant lost forests.

“All these countries were able to keep producing the food they needed and growing the forest cover,” he said. “The myth was that in order to increase your productivi­ty and your food sovereignt­y and security you needed to slash or burn the forest. We documented that it’s not true.”

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