Desertification: UN experts prescribe global policy overhaul to avoid looming mass migrationsJune 28, 2007Desertification, exacerbated by climate change, represents "the greatest environmental challenge of our times" and governments must overhaul policy approaches to the issue or face mass migrations of people driven from degraded homelands within a single generation, warns a new analysis from the United Nations University. In the analysis for presentation June 28 at UN Headquarters, New York, UNU experts say the loss of soil productivity and the degradation of life-support services provided by nature pose imminent threats to international stability. They outline a multi-point prescription for policy reform at every level of government. "It is imperative that effective policies and sustainable agricultural practices be put in place to reverse the decline of drylands," says Prof. Hans van Ginkel, UN Under Secretary-General and Rector of UNU. Land use policy reform is urgently needed to halt overgrazing, over-exploitation, trampling and unsustainable irrigation practices, as are policies to create livelihood alternatives for dryland populations, he says. Based on input of 200 experts from 25 countries convened in Algiers late last year, the analysis urges governments to adopt a broader, overarching view and a more coordinated, integrated and interlinked approach to dealing with desertification, climate change, poverty reduction and other public concerns. It highlights dozens of problems and inconsistencies in policy-making today at every level, saying decisions are often taken in isolated sectoral silos, the end results of which, on balance, can be counterproductive. "Some forces of globalization, while striving to reduce economic inequality and eliminate poverty are contributing to worsening desertification. Perverse agricultural subsidies are one such example," says Prof. van Ginkel. One-third of all people on Earth - about 2 billion in number - are potential victims of desertification's creeping effect. And, left unchecked, the number of people at risk of displacement due to severe desertification is an estimated 50 million over the next 10 years - a sweep of migrants worldwide equal in number to the entire population of South Africa or South Korea. "Addressing desertification is a critical and essential part of adaptation to climate change and mitigation of global biodiversity losses," says Prof. van Ginkel. "UNU has led the argument over the last decade that such inter-linkages in policy formulations must be taken." "Reforming policies to combat desertification also represent one of the world's most expedient ways to sequester more atmospheric carbon and help address the climate change issue," says Zafar Adeel, lead author of the analysis and Director of the UNU's Canadian-based International Network on Water, Environment and Health. Policy formulation for combating desertification "has been hindered by the lack of concrete data about rates and extent of desertification," he adds. "We must, as the global international community interested in desertification, put monitoring and assessment at the top of our policy agenda." Desertification shows no sign of abatement: An "environmental crisis" with major impacts UNU says the main barrier to expanding isolated successes at combating desertification is "the lack of effective management policies." In some countries where policies are deemed conducive to addressing desertification, enactment and implementation falls short. Or, designed and implemented at a national level, policies fail to translate into local action. Worse, some policies provide perverse incentives, exacerbating competition and conflict over the use of land and natural resources. Among many recommendations, the report urges governments and policy-makers to: * Reject the notion that aridity and water scarcity are inevitable; * Create financial incentives for pastoralists and other dryland users to preserve and enhance the ecosystem services their land provides to all; * Accept the carbon sequestration as a measure for simultaneously combating desertification and climate change. While vegetative cover in most drylands is sparse, drylands represent more than 40% of global land area, providing immense opportunities for carbon sequestration; * Foster alternative, sustainable livelihoods for dryland dwellers, including non-agricultural jobs in industry and tourism, for example; * Yield ownership and decision making to communities: empower them to take charge of land on which they depend and end the pattern of individuals chasing environmentally-detrimental short-term gains; * Promote greater transparency and accountability, the participation of multiple actors, information sharing, measurable results, and follow-up systems; * Better educate local populations and policymakers, many of whom lack adequate awareness of the fragility of their natural resource base and, in some places, fail to understand fundamental concepts of "drylands" and "desertification;" * Put science at the heart of policy making and beef up research on emerging issues such as thresholds or "tipping points" as they relate to migration and desertification; and * Improve coordination at all levels: Nationally: harmonize policies dispersed across a range of government ministries and agencies; rationalize and link the wide assortment of development, poverty reduction and environmental policy frameworks, independently conceived and "each in their own orbit," to encourage synergies and integration; Regionally: to help address transboundary issues such as integrated river basin management and environmental migration; and Internationally: better relate global conventions, agreements and other initiatives one to another. The analysis says the separate constitutions, priorities and procedures involved in administering the mix of international agreements operating today prevent important synchronization needed to achieve broad social and environmental goals: food security and famine relief, conflict and migration prevention, better health and poverty reduction, desertification and climate change avoidance and biodiversity protection and enhancement. The authors urge governments to better define and understand environmental migration - its economic and ecological consequences, and to create a global framework to legally recognize and assist environmental refugees. "The expected climatic change scenarios as projected by the recently published report of the IPCC give an additional dark shade to an already gloomy picture. However it is difficult to properly quantify the number of environmental migrants and the migration routes as long as the concept itself remains debated even from a scientific point of view," the analysis says. UNU advances a classification scheme based on three subgroups of migrants driven predominantly by environmental reasons: * Environmentally motivated migrants * Environmentally forced migrants * Environmental refugees Finally, the analysis says governments need to measure progress in human-development terms and develop a common set of environmental indicators and data collection methods to enhance consistency for tracking and comparison purposes. United Nations University |
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| Related Desertification Current Events and Desertification News Articles Nitrogen loss threatens desert plant life, study shows As the climate gets warmer, arid soils lose nitrogen as gas, reports a new Cornell study. That could lead to deserts with even less plant life than they sustain today, say the researchers. First global scientific conference supporting UN efforts to curb desertification opens in Argentina As climate change negotiators continue to skirt the role of agricultural land use in reducing greenhouse gas emissions, top scientists working on land management in the world's vast dry areas will gather this week in Buenos Aires, Argentina, determined to make the case that thwarting desertification in drylands is viable and also critical to the success of a new climate deal. Perennial vegetation, an indicator of desertification in Spain A team of scientists has analyzed 29 esparto fields from Guadalajara to Murcia and has concluded that perennial vegetation cover is an efficient early warning system against desertification in these ecosystems. The study has been published in the Ecology magazine. Breakthrough made in assessing marine phytoplankton health Researchers from Oregon State University, NASA and other organizations said today that they have succeeded for the first time in measuring the physiology of marine phytoplankton through satellite measurements of its fluorescence - an accomplishment that had been elusive for years. River delta areas can provide clue to environmental changes, Texas A&M prof says Sediments released by many of the world's largest river deltas to the global oceans have been changed drastically in the last 50 years, largely as a result of human activity. Wind, Salt, and Water Are Leading Indicators of Land Degradation in Abu Dhabi Desert environments are characterized by poor vegetative cover, strong winds, dry, non-cohesive sandy soils, and hyper-arid conditions. Indigenous peoples at world summit to share climate change observations, coping techniques With the first climate change-related relocation of an Inuit village already underway, some 400 Indigenous People and observers from 80 nations are convening in Alaska for a UN-affiliated conference April 20-24 to discuss ways in which traditional knowledge can be used to both mitigate and adapt to climate change. New theory on largest known mass extinction in the history of the earth Did volatile halogenated gases from giant salt lakes at the end of the Permian Age lead to a mass extinction of species? Climate change means bigger medical, council and property bills Climate change concerns like melting icecaps, increased desertification, loss of coral reefs and the extinction of species like polar bears can seem a distant concern in our everyday lives. Little attention, however, has been paid to the likelihood of increased bills, through tax and insurance charges, that will be incurred as the UK climate changes. U.N. Climate Change Conference considers ancient soil replenishment technique in battle against global warming Former inhabitants of the Amazon Basin enriched their fields with charred organic materials-biochar-and transformed one of the earth's most infertile soils into one of the most productive. More Desertification Current Events and Desertification News Articles |
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