Explaining desertification di Simona Gili

COMBATING DESERTIFICATION


2004 was the year of combat against desertification [ES1]. In many countries of the world people is going to do something to solve this threaten problem. Under the supervision of the FAO, in the 1994 the major world nations have decided to create a convention present in each country with the intention to share the knowledge and expertise on sustainable development and drylands management.
The objective of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) is to mitigate the effects of drought in countries experiencing serious drought and/or desertification, particularly in Africa, through effective action at all levels, supported by international cooperation and partnership arrangements, in the framework of an integrated approach which is consistent with Agenda 21, with a view to contributing to the achievement of sustainable development in affected areas.
What can we do to stop it? [E1] [ES1] [F1]

- The fight against desertification requires the joint involvement of local communities [E1], governments and all actors of civil society in the elaboration and implementation of sustainable development and poverty reduction strategies. Also education and training upon the issue are important, including increasing public awareness of the problem [F1].

- Alternative energy. With many of the local people using trees for firewood and cooking the problem has become acute. In order to gain further supplies of fuel the local population add more pressure to the depleted forests; thus adding to the desertification process. Solar ovens are being advocated as a means to relieving some of this pressure upon the environment. Also, wind turbines can provide clean energy while serving as windbreaks.

- Natural vegetation banner. At the local level, individuals and governments have to protect their lands, in particular they must reduce wind velocity. In areas of sand dunes, covering the dunes with large boulders or petroleum will interrupt the wind regime near the face of the dunes and prevent the sand from moving.

- Reforestation. Trees help fix the soil, act as wind breakers, enhance soil fertility, and help absorb water during heavy rainfall. Because the burning of land and forests increases dangerous greenhouse gases, planting new trees can help reduce the negative impacts of resulting climate change. Realizing this, the Chinese government has launched the world's largest tree planting project in an attempt to stop the encroaching desert.

- Restore and fertilize the land. A simple and cheap way to fertilize the land is to prepare compost, that will become humus and will regenerate the soil with organic matter. [F1]

- More efficient use of existing water resources and control of salinization are other effective tools for improving arid lands. New ways are being sought to use surface-water resources such as rain water harvesting or irrigating with seasonal runoff from adjacent highlands. New ways also being sought to find and tap groundwater resources and to develop more effective ways of irrigating arid and semiarid lands [E1].

- Research on the reclamation of deserts also is focusing on discovering proper crop rotation to protect the fragile soil, and on understanding how sand-fixing plants can be adapted to local environments.

- Intelligence technology. Satellite images and data can be used by the geographic information systems and completed by the results obtained from the new methods of collecting soil data using navigation satellites (GPS). These methods, whose development is supported by FAO, is making it possible to observe, evaluate and monitor both the bio-physical and the socio-economic aspects of desertification

What is being done about desertification?

- People of arid zones has become more careful about what kind of crops they are growing, where they are growing them, and also they have to be sensible about how they manage forests so that they contain water in the land rather than allowing the soil to dry out.

- Over the past decade, since the United Nations adopted its Convention to Combat Desertification, governments have become more aware of the need to act. In the wake of devastating floods in 1998, for example, China embarked on a massive reforestation campaign to stem the advance of the desert. Other countries have cut back on the use of fertilizers and encouraged better water management. Time will tell if those efforts can reverse current trends.

- The idea of "Bridging the gaps" in Kenya: it has created new partnerships and strengthened existing ones, so they altogether have proven an ideal starting point to begin implementing the provisions of the CCD.

- The Jatropha Project of Mali, West Africa: Jatropha curcas is generally well-known among the populations of Mali and has long been recognized as a plant of many uses. If carefully planted, Jatropha hedges not only protect gardens from hungry livestock but also reduce damage and erosion from wind and water. Traditionally the seeds were harvested by women and used for medical treatments and local soap production.

- Many important countries as Canada have begun to provide financial assistance and promote the exchange of technology and knowledge

- Many government and non-government organizations provide rural women with engine-driven grain mills to ease their work of food preparation.

- The use of Geographic Information System (GIS) technology has become an effective tool with which to make economic, environmental, and socially sustainable decisions in the prairie agricultural sector.

- Important research centres are developing crop varieties that will be better adapted to drought and potential insect and disease pests associated with climate change. Research is being conducted, using new technologies [E1] [F1] such as remote sensing and geographic information systems, to assess risks, evaluate the state of ecosystems, and to devise new and improved land use practices to respond to a changing climate.

- The particular traditional and contemporary land management practices applied in the target areas have been accessed, in particular their costs and benefits, and the factors influencing management decisions [E1]

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