On World Soil Day, it is important to remember that droughts are getting worse due to climate change. Treating wastelands is the only viable answer, says the head of the UN Convention to Combat Desertification

Monique Barbut at a meeting with journalists at the Bonn climate summit in Germany (Photo by Internews)
When governments around the world were asked in 2015 what they would like to do to combat climate change, why did over 140 countries include the issue of soil? Drought is the answer, says Monique Barbut, Executive Secretary of the UN Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD).
“You can all see the social and political consequences of migration from Africa to Europe. But do you realise that 100% of the migrants are coming from drylands?” Barbut asked while talking to a group of journalists gathered to cover the recent UN Climate summit in Bonn, Germany, with fellowships from the Internews Earth Journalism Network in partnership with The Stanley Foundation.
“The only asset of most people is land, and that asset is becoming less and less productive all the time due to climate change. Every year, more people die of drought than of all other calamities put together. This year, 25 million people in the Horn of Africa have been left without means to feed themselves,” she elaborated.
Solutions are available — land can be restored at less than USD 300 per acre. And this, according to Barbut, is a must to feed the growing population of the world. Four million hectares of new land have to be in production every year.
Where will this new land come from? The only solution is to restore degraded land. Two billion hectares of degraded land are available for restoration. Restoring just 300 million hectares out of this will ensure global food security till 2050, according to Barbut. It will also close the carbon dioxide emission gap by a third.
A lot of noise is made about other ways to combat climate change, but “this does not get any publicity because most of the cost is labour cost, and there are no large companies involved,” said the UNCCD head. “But restoring land does improve soil carbon sequestration, so this is starting to generate some interest.”
Be prepared
In an era of climate change, all countries need to be prepared for droughts, Barbut believes. Three countries have drought preparedness systems — the US, Australia and Israel. “We have started a drought preparedness initiative,” she said.
That takes the form of the Land Degradation Neutrality (LDN) Fund, which hopes to gather USD 300 million by the start of 2018, the largest after the renewable energy fund. Barbut said that the plan is to use the money in the same way as the renewable energy fund, by using the grant money as guarantee to design bankable projects.
Twelve million hectares of land are destroyed each year due to unsustainable farming practices and climate change. “We want to restore an equal amount each year to reach neutrality by 2030,” Barbut said.
She has found that it is not enough for the UNCCD to have projects to plant trees that will keep deserts at bay. The organisation has to get into related issues. “Lack of land rights causes desertification,” Barbut said. Water conflicts between herders and farmers are increasing everywhere. What the organisation is trying to do around the world is nothing less than to restore the sustainability of agriculture — especially in marginal and rainfed farms — in an era of climate change, so that the foundation on which human civilisation has rested for over 10,000 years may be maintained.
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