Spreading Deserts Threaten World Food Supply - UN
SWITZERLAND: September 3, 2007
GENEVA - Spreading deserts and degradation of farm land due to climate
change will pose a serious threat to food supplies for the world's surging
population in coming years, a senior United Nations scientist warned on
Friday.
M.V.K. Sivakumar of the UN's World Meteorological Organisation (WMO) said
the crunch could come in just over a decade as all continents see more
weather-related disasters like heat waves, floods, landslides and wildfires.
"Should we worry about land being degraded? Yes," Sivakumar, who leads the
WMO's agricultural meteorology division, told a news conference in Geneva.
"Today we feed the present world population of 6.3 billion from the 11 per
cent of the land surface that can be used for serious food production. The
question is: Will we be able to feed the 8.2 billion that we expect to
populate the globe in 2020 if even less land is available for farming?," he
said.
Africa, Latin America and parts of Asia -- where the climate is already more
extreme and arid regions are common -- will be most affected as rainfall
declines and its timing becomes less predictable, making water more scarce,
he said.
But Europe, particularly around the Mediterranean, would also suffer from
heat waves like those that this summer have led to devastating fires in
Greece.
Declining rainfall and evaporation of water supplies could also mean less
was available for irrigation and for generating electricity for farm
machinery, causing lower crop productivity.
Sivakumar said that in some regions the spread of deserts and the salination
of once arable land was already well under way. In the future it would be
most widespread in drier areas of Latin America, including in farming giant
Brazil.
In Africa, increasing climate variability would create major problems for
farmers, who are likely to see their growing seasons getting shorter and
crop yields cut, especially in areas near already arid and semi-arid
regions.
Sivakumar, speaking on the eve of a UN conference on desertification in
Madrid from September 3-14, said it was vital for the international
community to help put innovative and adaptive land-management practices into
action.
These should be targeted at preserving land and water resources. But a
return to mixing crops, rather than focusing on single-crop production based
on intensive use of fertilisers, could also help face the challenge, he
said.
Story by Robert Evans
REUTERS NEWS SERVICE
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