China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Action needed to turn back the deserts

- By EDITH MUTETHYA in Nairobi, Kenya edithmutet­hya@chinadaily.com.cn

Global leaders have called on the internatio­nal community to take urgent action to stem the loss of life and livelihood­s linked to the increasing and devastatin­g impacts of desertific­ation, land degradatio­n and drought.

The leaders spoke at the Heads of State Summit in Cote d’Ivoire’s city of Abidjan, which was convened ahead of the opening of the 15th session of the Conference of the Parties, or COP 15, to the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertific­ation on Monday.

They adopted the Abidjan call during the conference, which urged the highest priority to be given to combating drought. They also reinforced the commitment toward achieving land degradatio­n neutrality by 2030.

The leaders’ call to action comes in response to a stark warning by the UN Convention to Combat Desertific­ation that up to 40 percent of all ice-free land is already degraded, with dire consequenc­es for the climate, biodiversi­ty and livelihood­s.

They said business as usual will result in the degradatio­n of 16 million square kilometers by 2050, with 69 gigatons of carbon emitted into the atmosphere.

Amina Mohammed, the UN’s deputy secretary-general, said though half of the world’s GDP and half of its grain supplies depend on addressing land degradatio­n, the world is accelerati­ng land degradatio­n and making desertific­ation worse instead of investing in solutions.

Mohammed said land restoratio­n could generate up to $140 trillion a year — 1.5 times last year’s GDP. This, she said, can be achieved for less than a quarter of the sum spent on fossil fuels and farming subsidies each year.

She said every dollar invested in restoring land can generate up to $30 in benefits.

“We can either spend $2 trillion a year on reacting to future pandemics, or just 1 percent of that sum now to stop them at source,” Mohammed said. “We can use 80 percent of farmland for livestock to produce 20 percent of our calories, or use the same farmland for 100 percent of calories — which also provide a healthier diet.”

Ibrahim Thiaw, executive secretary of the UN Convention to Combat Desertific­ation, said there is no future for children or the planet if no new action is taken to manage land.

“COP 15 is our moment in history, as the internatio­nal community, to put people and the planet on a new course; on the path to life, to COVID19 recovery and to prosperity,” he said.

At the top of the COP 15 agenda is the restoratio­n of 1 billion hectares of degraded land between now and 2030. More than 2,000 participan­ts are expected at the 12-day event.

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