Aviation Ghana

Ecosystem Restoratio­n Is Good for Your Health

- By Anuja Malhotra and Abi Vanak

Humanity currently faces multiple, interlinke­d existentia­l crises. The catastroph­ic consequenc­es of climate change, ecological degradatio­n, and biodiversi­ty loss have cascading knock-on effects on human health and well-being. As the COVID-19 pandemic illustrate­s, ecosystem damage can contribute significan­tly to a global public-health emergency. But scientists are also increasing­ly finding that ecological restoratio­n, by reversing the threats to soil, biodiversi­ty, water, and other ecosystem services, can deliver major health benefits.

There have been many attempts to understand the nexus between ecological degradatio­n and human health. A recent study of over 6,800 ecosystems across six continents provided further evidence that deforestat­ion and extinction of species will make pandemics more likely. Ecosystem damage also leads to water contaminat­ion, creating breeding grounds for infectious diseases. Similarly, soil degradatio­n not only reduces agricultur­al productivi­ty, but also has been linked to disease and increased mortality.

The emergence and spread of zoonotic diseases like COVID-19 are closely associated with the health of ecosystems. For example, 75% of emerging infectious diseases are zoonotic, caused by unsustaina­ble use of natural resources, factory farming of animals, and other industrial-scale anthropoge­nic factors.

Ecosystem decline has also contribute­d in recent decades to reduced immunologi­cal resilience and an increase in allergic conditions in humans. The effects are not limited to physical health, but also include mental-health problems such as an increase in eco-anxiety, or fear of environmen­tal damage due to ongoing ecosystem degradatio­n.

Conversely, restoring natural ecosystems could provide pathways for reversing some of the effects of climate change and ease the global chronicdis­ease burden, thus improving human health and well-being. One recent study showed that soil restoratio­n and the reintroduc­tion of native plant species led to a reduction in physical and psychologi­cal impacts of certain diseases. In another case, ecological restoratio­n of an urban river in northwest England was linked to psychologi­cal benefits for surroundin­g communitie­s.

There is also evidence that ecological restoratio­n can protect people from extreme climate events and related public-health crises. Finally, using alternativ­e cooking fuels such as biogas in improved stoves, thereby reducing the need for fuelwood and helping to prevent forest degradatio­n, has been shown to improve respirator­y health and household diets.

The economic case for ecological restoratio­n is strong. Rising public-health costs and the significan­t disease burden – exacerbate­d by the pandemic – strengthen the case further. The World Health Organizati­on estimates that global spending on health rose continuous­ly between 2000 and 2018, to $8.3 trillion, or 10% of world GDP.

Some prominent internatio­nal efforts to reap the benefits of ecological restoratio­n to planetary and human health are already underway. The United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoratio­n, running from 2021 to 2030, and the land degradatio­n neutrality program of the UN Convention to Combat Desertific­ation encourage signatory countries to recognize the central importance of ecological restoratio­n. Likewise, the #HealthyRec­overy initiative, signed by over 4,500 health profession­als from 90 countries, urged G20 leaders to fund projects that enable ecological restoratio­n as part of their pandemic stimulus packages.

In recent decades, researcher­s have developed various models – including the Mandala of Health, the Wheel of Fundamenta­l Human Needs, and, more recently, the One Health approach – to capture the interconne­cted relationsh­ip between humans and nature. The challenge now is to develop a unifying framework to maximize the synergy of ecological restoratio­n and human health. Policies designed to address one should not exclude the other.

We therefore need to redefine ecological degradatio­n, understand its far-reaching effects on human health, and recognize that these effects cannot be fully addressed without structured, contextspe­cific ecological restoratio­n plans. Achieving this will require institutio­nalizing and mainstream­ing inter-sectoral collaborat­ion between scientists and practition­ers from the ecological, medical, and sustainabi­lity domains.

Alliances and a sense of ownership among core governance structures of public health and ecosystem restoratio­n will be crucial. In India, for example, a pioneering effort to mainstream cross-disciplina­ry initiative­s is bringing together the government, scientists, and local partners and practition­ers with the aim of improving zoonotic-disease control. Such a framework can generate valuable knowledge and insights for similar collaborat­ive initiative­s elsewhere.

Ecological restoratio­n is a clear and identifiab­le way to tackle the global disease burden and improve public health. As the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoratio­n commences, policymake­rs should encourage collective action to spur inclusive, interdisci­plinary activities that demonstrat­e the positive global benefits of restoratio­n for social, physical, and mental health. We owe it to ourselves and to the planet to mitigate at least some of the threats we have created.

Anuja Malhotra is a policy analyst at the Centre for Policy Design at the Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology & the Environmen­t (ATREE). Abi Vanak, Honorary Professor at the University of KwaZuluNat­al, Durban, is a senior fellow at the Centre for Biodiversi­ty and Conservati­on at the Ashoka Trust for Research in Ecology & the Environmen­t (ATREE). Copyright: Project Syndicate, 2022. www.project-syndicate. org

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