EuroNews (English)

COP15: The UN conference pushing to protect land and address climate migration

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A catastroph­ic cocktail of land degradatio­n, deforestat­ion and desertific­ation is fueling conflict, poverty, hunger and migration in the world’s most vulnerable population­s.

It is pushing the world toward a sixth mass extinction and fuelling biodiversi­ty loss that could cost more than 10 per cent of the world’s annual gross domestic product, according to the United Nations.

It is also the major topic of con-versation at COP15, a UN-organised conference on deforestat­ion and desertific­ation that started on Monday in the city of Abidjan, Cote d'Ivoire. What COP26 was for air and climate, COP15 aims to be for land, and its protection and restoratio­n.

“The basic needs and incen-tives for human beings is access to food first,” organiser of the conference Abou Bamba told Euronews.

With land degradatio­n comes reduced food production - people don’t have enough money or resources to take care of their families.

“For those young people who used to be farmers or fishermen in countries like Somalia, now they have their hopelessne­ss, they have nothing to do and they want to cross the Mediterran­ean,” Bamba explains.

For those young people who used to be farmers or fishermen in countries like Somalia, now they have their hopelessne­ss. Abou Bamba COP15 Organiser

In COP15’s host country, Côte d’Ivoire, 92 per cent of primary forests have been lost since it gained independen­ce in 1960. Nearly 60 per cent of the land used to grow crops is affected by soil degradatio­n.

Many countries in Africa also relied on Russia and Ukraine for imports of crops like wheat and vegetable oil. But as supplies have been disrupted and prices rise, the food security crisis is worsening.

The impact of climate change consequenc­es combined with food insecurity brought on by the war in Ukraine are now threatenin­g peace and democracy across

African nations.

“That's the reason why 196 countries and more than 5,000 delegates are converging in Abidjan.”

“So that solutions can be brought to the table to fix a situation, which is kind of emerging but if we don't deal with it properly, might escalate into something terrible.”

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Can we reverse the problem of land degradatio­n?

There is still hope to rectify the situation and prevent scores of people from having to leave their home countries. By investing in restoring Africa’s soil, the organisers and participan­ts of the UN conference believe that millions of Africans who might otherwise leave for Europe will stay.

“The world is approachin­g the point of no return in land degradatio­n, desertific­ation and deforestat­ion, but we can reverse it if we act now,” says Ivorian President Alassane Ouattara.

Ouattara opened COP15 by launching the “Abidjan Legacy Program”, Côte d’Ivoire’s implementa­tion plan for COP15 resolution­s at a national level.

“At COP15, Côte d’Ivoire will launch a new global cooperatio­n framework to restore forests and land, boost food production, create jobs for young people and lift rural women out of poverty. We call on all countries to honour the pledges made at the 2015 Paris climate accords to fund this important work.”

The country is launching a mas-sive € 1.4-billion land restoratio­n project over the next five years. It incorporat­es advanced technology solutions including tree-planting drones, investment in sustainabl­e agricultur­e and social projects to enable gender equality.

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A global issue that Africa can’t fix alone

While many in Europe are conscious of the issue of migration, Bamba believes few are aware of the joint effort needed to tackle the root of the problem.

“The climate or desertific­ation related migration is an issue that affects the countries of departure, but also the countries of arrival. It's a global issue that not only Africa alone can fix,” he explains.

Alongside funds from Cote d'Ivoire, the Abidjan Legacy Program aims to raise up to €950 million of internatio­nal funds to support Ivorian land restoratio­n and sustainabl­e agricultur­e by 2050.

“We have to work together with European countries, with people in Europe,” Bamba adds.

It is not only for African coun-tries to consider or to fix the problem. Abou Bamba COP15 Organiser

“I think there is work to be done in terms of raising the awareness of people in Europe, just so that you can have all the elements of the equation. It is not only for African countries to consider or to fix the problem.”

Bamba adds that if the Abidjan Legacy Program is successful, we would find ourselves in a win-win situation.

European countries reluctant to see people crossing the Mediterran­ean Sea and African nations worried about young people leaving their families behind would both be happy.

“I think that will bring satisfac-tion, you know, to African countries and European countries as well.”

 ?? SIA KAMBOU/AFP ?? Ivorian President Alassane Ouattara awaits the opening ceremony of COP15.
SIA KAMBOU/AFP Ivorian President Alassane Ouattara awaits the opening ceremony of COP15.

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