Five Facts About the Global Problem of Desertification
INTERNATIONAL: July 9, 2007
About 1.2 billion people are at risk from desertification as deserts expand
and degraded dry lands cover close to a third of the world's land surface
area, the United Nations estimates. Here are five facts about the phenomenon
of encroaching desert lands.
* Desertification is not new. The Sumerian and Babylonian empires are among
several ancient civilisations thought to have declined more rapidly after
their agricultural output fell because of prolonged desiccation and water
scarcity.
* Deserts expand naturally, but "desertification" is a different process
where land in arid, semi-dry areas becomes degraded, soil loses its
productivity and vegetation thins because of human activities and/or
prolonged droughts/floods.
* The destruction wrought by spreading deserts grabbed global attention in
1968, nine years before the United Nations held its first conference on the
issue. Some 250,000 people and millions of domestic animals died over a
six-year period of severe drought in west Africa's sub-Saharan Sahel region,
that hit Mauritania, Senegal, Mali, Burkina Faso, Niger, and Chad.
* Globally, the rate of desertification is speeding up, the UN Environment
Programme (UNEP) says. Africa is the worst affected continent; with
two-thirds of its land either desert or drylands. Almost a third of land in
the US is affected by desertification; and one quarter of Latin America and
the Caribbean, and one fifth of Spain.
* Desertification is mainly a problem of sustainable development. Its causes
include over-cropping, over-grazing, improper irrigation practices, and
deforestation. Poor land management practices such as these often stem from
the socioeconomic conditions in which the farmers live, and can be
prevented.
Sources: Reuters, United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (
www.unccd.int )
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