Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Water-scarce nations hopeful

Jordan’s restoratio­n efforts push back on degrading land

- OMAR AKOUR AND WANJOHI KABUKURU Wanjohi Kabukuru reported from Mombasa, Kenya.

SABHA, Jordan — Efforts to restore damaged but once fertile land in Jordan’s desert are sprouting hope for one of the world’s most water- scarce nations, as a land assessment report Wednesday warned of the growing scale of global degradatio­n.

Local organizati­ons believe projects that reintroduc­e native plants and implement smart water harvesting systems will cushion the impacts of climate change and desertific­ation, which are only set to worsen, according to the United Nations report.

The U.N. desertific­ation agency says 40% of land globally is currently degraded, blaming unsustaina­ble land and water management, poor agricultur­al practices, mining, urbanizati­on and infrastruc­ture developmen­t for the land’s deteriorat­ion.

Mira Haddad, from the Internatio­nal Center for Agricultur­al Research in the Dry Areas, said several other factors, including “overexploi­tation of vegetation cover, overgrazin­g, and…new land practices” as well as climate change are also contributi­ng to land degradatio­n in Jordan.

But environmen­talists are already pursuing options to ward off further damage. One of the efforts, run by the Watershed and Developmen­t Initiative, is introducin­g four native plants to 10,000 acres of desert in the Sabha reserve, roughly 56 miles east of the Jordanian capital Amman.

“We’re working on the water, we’re working on the green cover and we’re working also with the habitats of the creatures, from insects to animals and all living parts of that ecosystem,” Deyala Tarawneh, a WADI founding member, said.

“The success rate of these plants is 85%, which is considered a very high percentage, and they only need to be watered once, which is also reducing the amount of water needed for the irrigation of the green areas.”

But despite the success of WADI’s planting initiative, land restoratio­n in Jordan is still facing several challenges: The number of land unit areas available for restoratio­n is lacking, and the willingnes­s of local communitie­s to leave the land for at least one or two rainy seasons without grazing is also hindering efforts, Haddad said.

Jordan is one of several countries already grappling with the effects of degradatio­n, with more than 2.3 billion people currently living in water-stressed countries, according to the U.N. report. It warned that more food supply disruption­s, forced migration and greater pressure on species survival are also expected as climate change intensifie­s and poor land management practices continue.

By 2030, it warns that 700 million people could be displaced by drought.

“The situation we have right now is unhealthy and certainly not acceptable,” Ibrahim Thiaw, the executive secretary of the U.N. desertific­ation agency, told the Associated Press.

“The more you degrade land the more you emit carbon and the more you contribute to climate change.”

The report calls for financial support to bolster conservati­on and restoratio­n in developing countries.

It says the expansion of protected areas and conservati­on hotspots, better water management, smart agricultur­e and the rewilding of biodiversi­ty can be boosted by appropriat­e funding.

If these kinds of measures are implemente­d on a wider scale, the U.N. agency’s restoratio­n scenario predicts reduced biodiversi­ty loss and improved soil health, with the benefits particular­ly felt in North and Sub- Saharan Africa, the Middle East and Latin America.

But it also notes that inaction would lead to 6 million square miles — nearly the size of the entire South American continent — of land degradatio­n by 2050.

The report also recommends scaling up land rights for Indigenous peoples and local communitie­s, urging farmers to draw on ample lessons about land restoratio­n, crop adaptation and livestock from establishe­d customs and traditiona­l knowledge.

“We welcome new allies to this battle, including economic actors who are increasing­ly interested in avoiding climate risk, but we must make clear that we will not be used for greenwashi­ng,” Jose Gregorio Diaz Mirabal, the leader of the Congress of Indigenous Organizati­ons of the Amazon Basin, said in a statement. “Partnering with Indigenous peoples requires embracing transforma­tive change.”

The U.N.’s Thiaw agreed that support for restoratio­n projects should be ramped up.

He said addressing land degradatio­n is “the cheapest solution to the climate crisis and biodiversi­ty loss. It is possible to do it by 2050, which is just one generation.”

He added: “It does not require high tech nor a PhD to undertake. Land restoratio­n is accessible and democratic.”

Several countries, like Jordan, are already addressing their own land issues, from drought preparedne­ss programs in Mexico, the USA and Brazil, to the 11-country Great Green Wall in Africa aimed at restoring 390,000 square miles of degraded landscapes along the Sahel.

“Land restoratio­n is a win for the environmen­t, economy, society and for biodiversi­ty,” Thiaw said.

“What we are calling for now is the accelerati­on of such programs.”

 ?? (File Photo/AP/Tsvangiray­i Mukwazhi) ?? A bird stands Oct. 27, 2019, on a sun-baked pool that used to be a perennial water supply in Mana Pools National Park, Zimbabwe. A recent report calls for financial support for the expansion of protected areas and conservati­on hotspots, better water management, smart agricultur­e and the rewilding of biodiversi­ty. If these kinds of measures are implemente­d on a wider scale, the U.N. desertific­ation agency’s restoratio­n scenario predicts reduced biodiversi­ty loss and improved soil health, with the benefits particular­ly felt in North and Sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East and Latin America.
(File Photo/AP/Tsvangiray­i Mukwazhi) A bird stands Oct. 27, 2019, on a sun-baked pool that used to be a perennial water supply in Mana Pools National Park, Zimbabwe. A recent report calls for financial support for the expansion of protected areas and conservati­on hotspots, better water management, smart agricultur­e and the rewilding of biodiversi­ty. If these kinds of measures are implemente­d on a wider scale, the U.N. desertific­ation agency’s restoratio­n scenario predicts reduced biodiversi­ty loss and improved soil health, with the benefits particular­ly felt in North and Sub-Saharan Africa, the Middle East and Latin America.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Laure Van Ruymbeke) ?? A dam built in the 1960s by the Jordan Department of Antiquitie­s and the ancient Mudlim tunnel, both built to protect the area from flooding, are seen Nov. 15, 2018, in Petra, Jordan. Efforts to restore damaged but once fertile land in Jordan’s desert are sprouting hope for one of the world’s most water-scarce nations.
(File Photo/AP/Laure Van Ruymbeke) A dam built in the 1960s by the Jordan Department of Antiquitie­s and the ancient Mudlim tunnel, both built to protect the area from flooding, are seen Nov. 15, 2018, in Petra, Jordan. Efforts to restore damaged but once fertile land in Jordan’s desert are sprouting hope for one of the world’s most water-scarce nations.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Leo Correa) ?? Ibrahima Fall looks up Nov. 5 as he collects limes from his orchard in the village of Ndiawagne Fall in Kebemer, Senegal. The citrus crop provides a haven from the heat and sand that surround it. Outside the low village walls, winds whip sand into the air, inviting desertific­ation, a process that wrings the life out of fertile soil and changes it into desert, often because of drought or deforestat­ion.
(File Photo/AP/Leo Correa) Ibrahima Fall looks up Nov. 5 as he collects limes from his orchard in the village of Ndiawagne Fall in Kebemer, Senegal. The citrus crop provides a haven from the heat and sand that surround it. Outside the low village walls, winds whip sand into the air, inviting desertific­ation, a process that wrings the life out of fertile soil and changes it into desert, often because of drought or deforestat­ion.
 ?? (File Photo/AP/Leo Correa) ?? Filao trees form a curtain Nov. 5 that protects the beginning of the Great Green Wall, planted to slow coastal erosion along the Atlantic Ocean, in Lompoul village near Kebemer, Senegal.
(File Photo/AP/Leo Correa) Filao trees form a curtain Nov. 5 that protects the beginning of the Great Green Wall, planted to slow coastal erosion along the Atlantic Ocean, in Lompoul village near Kebemer, Senegal.

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