Of the Classes of Environmental Regulation, Grasslands Are Poorest of the Poor

The Government of India has used the prompt to deal with climate change as an invitation to blindly plant more trees at the expense of grasslands.

Gujarat and Rajasthan are covered in a vast, dry expanse of grass and thorny scrub. This unforgiving environment, which spans the edge of the Rann right up to Rajasthan’s border with Pakistan, is crucial to an entire ecosystem that includes several wild species, many of which are disappearing. These include indigenous wolves, foxes, chinkara, blackbucks, the long-eared caracal, the critically endangered great Indian bustard and the endangered lesser florican.

Grasslands in all their forms – there are reportedly 11 types in India alone – occupy 25% of India by area and provide 50% of the fodder to the country’s 500 million livestock.

But in spite of how critical they are to grazing communities and for wild species, grasslands have languished in the blindspot of Indian environmental regulation, and are now being threatened by it. The blinkered focus of environmental conservation on climate change runs the risk of drowning out other concerns, and in some cases actually exacerbates them. Some of the more well-funded strategies to combat climate change, like aggressive afforestation and a focus on green energy, pose serious risks to biodiversity and as a result to the environment as a whole. This is particularly true for grasslands.

Also read: There Is Nary a Pest as Hated as Mesquite in the Desert Flatland of Kutch

Regulators equate increasing green cover with environmental conservation. This is to be expected given the colonial roots of forest administration in India and its focus on harvesting commercially lucrative timber for the colonial state. However, afforestation continues to dominate the conversation seven decades after independence, leading to a host of problems.

For example, under the Forest (Conservation) Act 1980, forest land can be diverted for development projects only if the Government of India approves it, and the project’s proponents have to compensate for the loss of forests by raising a forest or paying another agency – usually the forest department – to maintain a forest. The result is usually monoculture plantations of non-indigenous, commercial species such as eucalyptus, acacia and teak, all of which are counted as forests but shouldn’t be.

One phase of environment law is defined by an anti-pollution agenda and since the 1990s, it has pivoted to combat deforestation and tackle climate change. However, through these phases, officials have consistently classified grasslands as ‘wastelands’ and ‘degraded lands’ that are in need of ‘conservation’, and best diverted to ‘productive uses’ like afforestation and industrial development. Right from the National Forest Policy of 1988 to the draft National Forest Policy of 2018, grasslands find no mention in the government’s agenda. To date, no government policy exists to regulate grasslands.

A report of the erstwhile Planning Commission released over a decade ago revealed this bias in environmental conservation strategies for the “lands without godfathers”:

Grasslands are not managed as an ecosystem in their own right by the Forest Department whose interest lies mainly in trees, not by the Agriculture Department who are interested in agriculture crops, nor the Veterinary Department who are concerned with livestock, but not the grass on which the livestock depends. Grasslands are the ‘common’ lands of the community and while there have been robust traditional institutions ensuring their sustainable management in the past, today due to take-over by government or breakdown of traditional institutions they are the responsibility of none. They are the most productive ecosystems in the Indian Subcontinent, but they belong to all, are controlled by none, and they have no godfathers. Indeed they are often looked at as ‘wastelands’ on which tree plantations have to be done, or which can be easily diverted for other uses.

A retired IAS officer recently filed a petition in the Supreme Court alerting the judiciary to this prejudice and its dangers. The officer wants to protect the last living members of two endemic grassland species: the great Indian bustard and the lesser florican. Both birds have been protected under the Wild Life (Protection) Act, 1972, for over two decades and both birds suffered a decline of over 80%. Today, only 100-150 great Indian bustards and fewer than 700 lesser floricans survive.

One of the greatest challenges these birds face is the loss of their habitat. The anthropocentric and exclusive idea of green growth means that the Centre has rooted for rapid afforestation and green energy projects, such as windmills and solar power plants – projects that have proved fatal for the bustards, whose eyes evolved to navigate rolling grasslands, not objects right in front of them. Many of these birds have died after head-on collisions with power lines.

In spite of these consequences, officials continue to see grasslands only through the limiting lens of climate change, while their inhabitants and those who rely on them have been completely sidelined. The government’s Green India Mission, launched in 2014, aims to double the area under afforestation and targets grasslands as the primary locations for this task, describing them as “highly degraded ecosystems.”

Also read: The Seven-Decade Transnational Hunt for the Origins of the Kyasanur Forest Disease

In January 2018, the Union environment ministry set up a high-level committee to study ways to increase India’s green cover. It recommended that, to achieve the proposed green cover target of one-third of the total geographical area, ‘wastelands’ would have to be leased to the corporate sector. At the recently concluded 14th Conference of Parties under the UN Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD), Prime Minister Narendra Modi announced that these targets had been increased to 26 million hectares. But not all that is green is good.

The looming climate crisis poses an unprecedented existential threat with far-reaching impact across continents, landscapes and species. So it is only fair that the world’s attention is defined by a focus on tackling this crisis. However, that doesn’t mean governments can run roughshod over biodiversity. The climate crisis is a historical problem, rooted in a fossil-fuel-based capitalist system, and it can’t be overcome by focusing solely on green industries and re-greening. The response to the climate crisis must protect natural habitats and the ecosystems that depend on them.

India’s extensive geographical boundaries and ever-growing population mean that its choices impact the future of the world. India is one of the most populous countries, with increasing carbon emissions, as well as an international biodiversity capital: it hosts 7-8% of the world’s recorded species. Its government is responsible not just to India’s as well as the world’s citizens but also to the numerous lifeforms that call India home.

Ria Singh Sawhney is an advocate and researcher, specialising in digital rights, environmental and human rights law. Sugandha Yadav is an advocate practicing at the Supreme Court, also specialising in environment and human rights law.

Farmers Use Canal, Tubewells to Reverse Desertification in Jaisalmer

Increase in agricultural activity between 2003 and 2013 in Jaisalmer reversed soil erosion in about 1,967 square km.

Farmers living along the 3,670 square km command area of the Indira Gandhi Canal have managed to reverse desertification in large chunks of land in Jaisalmer, the farthest district from the canal’s source. They have dug small ponds, locally known as diggies to store the canal water during summer.

Meheruddin of Chaidhani village has about five acres of land and the diggi he has dug is 135 feet on each side.

“We generally depend on the monsoon rains for our crops. I grow sesame and guar. But when the rains fail, like this year, we try to save some of the crops by using water from the diggi through drip irrigation,” he said.

Many farmers like Meheruddin have seen their fortunes change after the canal reached Jaisalmer. Sukhdev Singh, who works as a caretaker in the last village the canal supplies water to in the district, is trying to grow citrus fruits on a 5.5-hectare orchard.

He was hired because of his experience in farming using canal water in Sri Ganganagar. Singh relies on a pond created from the seepage of the well. He has more than 5,000 trees, which he irrigates using a drip system.

What’s common to Meheruddin’s farm and Sukhdev Singh’s orchard is that they look green despite being in an arid region, where the average rainfall is below 200 millimetres.

Increase in agricultural activity between 2003 and 2013 in Jaisalmer reversed soil erosion in about 1,967 square km, an area 1.2 times the size of Delhi, showed the Land degradation and Desertification Atlas prepared by the Space Application Centre, Ahmedabad. This is almost 6% of the total geographical area of the state.

Wind, a deterrent

Wind causes around 77% of land degradation in Jaisalmer. In 2013, 93% of the land was undergoing degradation as opposed to 98% in 2003. Apart from the city area, most of Jaisalmer is made of sand dunes. Some are stabilised, but a lot of them are not.

During the summer months (May-July), high velocity winds move this sand as far as the Gangetic plains of Uttar Pradesh. Any vegetation on the ground helps arrest this movement.

Tubewells and canal irrigation are the drivers of this change in land classification, said Priyabrata Santra, principal scientist, Central Arid Zone Research Institute in Jodhpur.

Also read | It’s Raining Sand: How Anantapur Came to Resemble a Desert

“It is well known that the Indira Gandhi Canal increased agriculture along its command area. But the lesser known fact is that once the villages got electricity, they started setting up deep borewells near a set of villages called Lathi and Chandan in the Pokaran block,” said Santra.

“Most of Jaisalmer suffers from soil salinity and underground aquifers also contain saline water, but there are pockets with sweet water like Lathi and Chandan where farmers exploited groundwater to grow crops,” the scientist added.

Agriculture in Jaisalmer has grown at a phenomenal pace because of the availability of more water. The total cropped area increased to 10.27 lakh ha in 2016 from 6.37582 lakh ha in 2007. This was due to availability of more ground water extracted through from tubewells.

Canal irrigation, which accounted for nearly 73% of all irrigated land in 2007, fell to 61% in 2016, with tubewells making up for the remaining 38%.

Shelterbelt plantations was another reason behind this land stability. Shelterbelts have been planted all along the Indira Gandhi Canal, major highways and train tracks.

Also read | Narendra Modi Announces Increase in India’s Land Restoration Target at UN Conference

“These were to stabilise the sand dunes and stop the movement of sand. Native trees like Khejri, Acacia and in certain places Eucalyptus were also selected,” said G. Singh, principal scientists at the Arid Forest Research Institute.

The forest department by 2012 had planted about 38,000 kilometres of shelterbelts across the state.

More water not always good

While the green covers was increasing, experts warned that too much irrigation could reverse the gains. Part of the problem was most of the command area of the canal had high soil salinity. “While initially irrigation could work and push the soil down, after sometime the salt will start to come up to the surface and affect the plants,” said Santra.

“The other problem with the canal was of Prosopis juliflora (a type of mesquite),” said Singh. The canal water increased the infestation of this species, especially in areas where shelterbelts with native species were planted. This could prove to be problematic for farmers, he added.

This story originally appeared in Down To Earth. It is republished here as part of The Wire‘s partnership with Covering Climate Now, a global collaboration of more than 250 news outlets to strengthen coverage of the climate story.

Climate Change: People of Asia’s Mountains Face Severe Food Insecurity

In only five years since 2012, the rural mountain population vulnerable to food-related insecurity increased by 12%.

Shifting precipitation patterns, increasing urbanisation, groundwater depletion, fading springs and land-use change – these are just a few of the issues assailing mountainous regions in developing countries around the world.

Food self-sufficiency is an important first step to achieving food and nutrition security. But many mountain communities – especially in the Indian Himalaya – are unlucky on this count. According to a new assessment, between 2012 and 2017, the rural mountain population vulnerable to food-related insecurity increased from 307 million to 346 million people – i.e. by 12% in only five years.

Researchers released the study on September 12, at the UN Convention to Combat Desertification, Land Degradation and Drought (UNCCD) in Greater Noida, near Delhi. The report was prepared by the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation and the UNCCD’s Global Mechanism team.

Additionally, between 2012 and 2017, the Asian mountain population increased 8.1% to 579 million but the number of people vulnerable to food-related insecurity declined at 7.5%. Asia also logged the highest increase among continents in the number of vulnerable people: 44 million.

“Of the 240 million people that live in the Hindu Kush Himalayan region, a third live below the poverty line, 30% do not have enough to eat and 50% suffer from some form of malnutrition,” Dhrupad Choudhury, a programme manager at the International Centre for Integrated Mountain Development, Nepal, told The Wire.

Nearly 50 million people reside among the Himalayan mountains, and almost 1.5 billion depend on these mountains for water, food and energy. The Indian Himalayan Region spans Jammu, Kashmir, Ladakh, Himachal Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Tripura and parts of Assam and West Bengal. The situation is the same in all of the Hindu Kush Himalayan countries.

The mountain communities suffer due to either too much or too little water, and face extreme events more often. Himalayan populations are also remote, hardly accessible and depend more on natural resources. The more the latter are depleted, the poorer and more vulnerable these people become, according to the report.

For example, about 70% of Bhutan is steep slope dryland; a third of the agricultural land is located on steep slopes; and over half of Bhutan’s population depends on agricultural even though the entire country is mountainous. Food insecurity, as a result, is not hard to imagine.

Also read: Forget Countdowns – Climate Catastrophe Has Started in the High Mountains of Asia

The report presents a similar case study from Nepal, where around 35% of the 14 million people living in the country’s mountainous parts don’t have assured long-term food supply. Agriculture employs two-thirds of Nepal’s workforce and contributes to one-third of its GDP. A report that set targets for land degradation neutrality specified that 118 sq. km of forest cover was converted for other use between 2000 to 2010, and that 4% of the country is in a state of declining productivity.

Land degradation is a major environmental problem, especially in the form of erosion, landslides and floods. Similarly, loss of vegetation due to deforestation, over-harvesting forest products, unsustainable fuel-wood extraction, shifting cultivation, encroachment into forestland, forest fires and overgrazing are the principal drivers of the degradation of forest lands.

Another common problem across the Himalaya, as Choudhury highlighted, is the expanding presence of irrigated rice varieties even at higher altitudes at the cost of the local agro-diversity. This doesn’t only disrupt the “protein-calorie balance” but also exposes farmers who have stopped growing the variety they once used to to the vagaries of nature more. The more diverse crops are cultivated, the more resilient the farmer’s industry is in the face of unpredictable weather. “And with this, they are also losing their vast traditional knowledge of dietary diversity,” he said.

Then there is increasing urbanisation: all new urban centres in the Hindu-Kush Himalaya are being built mostly on arable land – an already scarce commodity on mountains. This in turn could affect long-term food independence, experts warned.

Choudhury said that while 70% of farms situated on plains are irrigated while the remainder are rain-fed, the situation is exactly the opposite in the mountains: 65% of agriculture is rain-fed and 35% is irrigated. And “differences in the mountains and the plains demand different strategies for ensuring water security.”

Krishnan Singh Rautela, of the Integrated Mountain Initiative, a pan-Indian Himalaya consortium, also complained about the land in the hills becoming increasingly fragmented and that agriculture in the mountains is no longer considered to be economically viable. “But with intelligent planning, we can ensure reverse migration,” he said. “Growing of high value commercial/horticulture crop, say mushrooms, can be one option.”

The report finally recommended that officials develop national and regional partnership to build consensus on ways “to monitor vulnerability and document the impact of mountain stressors.” It also suggested taking advantage of existing financial resources within the framework of the UN’s sustainable development goals.

Nivedita Khandekar is an independent journalist based in Delhi. She writes on environmental and developmental issues. Follow her on Twitter at @nivedita_him.

Narendra Modi Announces Increase in India’s Land Restoration Target at UN Conference

The prime minister’s announcement is an improvement over the figure quoted by Prakash Javadekar, but lower than the number that the environment ministry had earlier decided upon.

New Delhi: On Monday, Prime Minister Narendra Modi addressed the 14th Conference of Parties (COP 14) of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD), being held in Greater Noida since September 2. He spoke broadly on the threats posed by climate change including the loss of biodiversity and land degradation – which are the focus areas of this conference.

Outlining India’s resolve to combat the threats of land degradation and loss of biodiversity, Modi invoked the country’s spiritual connection with land. “In Indian culture, the Earth is held sacred and treated as the Mother. While getting up in the morning, when we touch the earth with our feet we seek the forgiveness of Mother Earth by praying,” he said.

An increase, a decrease and another increase

Modi announced that India will be increasing its land restoration target “from 21 million hectares to 26 million hectares”. This target, the prime minister said, will be achieved by 2030 to aid India in reaching land degradation neutrality, as required by the UNCCD.

Also read | Desertification Costs World Economy up to $15 Trillion: UN

There has been a degree of confusion regarding India’s land restoration target. Down to Earth has pointed out that the Ministry for Environment, Forests and Climate Change decided on June 17 at the Land Degradation Neutrality Target Setting Programme that it will be setting a target of restoring 30 million hectares of degraded land.

On August 28, however, at the curtain raiser for the COP 14, minister in charge Prakash Javadekar said that the target figure was substantially lower, at five million hectares.

Thus, Modi’s announcement is an improvement over the figure quoted by Javadekar, but lower than the figure that the ministry had earlier decided on.

Even the 26-million-hectare target which has now been set by Modi is only 27% of the land that is already degraded in India. According to a 2016 study by the Indian Space Research Organisation (ISRO), 96 million hectares of land area in the country already stands degraded.

Counting India’s tree cover

Speaking at the conference, Modi also claimed that India increased its tree cover by 0.8 million hectares between 2015 and 2017. “In cases where there is any diversion of forest land, that has to be compensated by afforestation and a monetary payment is also made,” he said.

Also read | How Did India End up Staring at a Water-Uncertain Future?

India’s data on tree and forest cover has come in for questioning, including by the UN itself, as Business Standard reported this January. It had found that the tree cover data submitted by India was lacking transparency and clarity. “The data and information used by India in constructing its FRL are partially transparent and not complete and therefore not fully in accordance with the guidelines contained,” a UN review said of the data provided by India.

Experts and academics have also raised eyebrows at the government’s claim that the tree cover in India has increased. They have said that India has erroneously included commercial plantations in its tree and forest cover data.

The ZBNF impact

Modi also claimed that measures such as micro irrigation and the government’s promotion of zero budget natural farming (ZBNF) will lead to the restoration of degraded land and minimise further erosion.

However, as The Wire has reported earlier, no scientific studies have been completed on the effectiveness of ZBNF in achieving any of what the government claims it can. Government-funded research institutes are in the process of testing its effectiveness on various parameters, including its impact on soil quality, which is relevant here given Modi’s claim that ZBNF can help achieve the goal of land degradation neutrality.

Modi also used the platform to underline his government’s commitment to ending the use of single-use plastic. “Menace of plastic waste will also lead to land degradation and it will be irreversible. We will put an end to single use plastic in the coming years. The time has come for world to say goodbye to single use plastic,” he said.

Need to Change Ties With Land, Food to Avert Large Scale Climate Crisis: UN Report

Unless rapid changes are affected, even drastic cutting down of fossil fuel emissions will not help, says the report.

New Delhi: Unless human beings rapidly alter land use patterns and dietary habits, the world will not be able to avert a climate crisis, the latest report of the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) has warned.

Even more dire is the report’s stress on the fact that such a crisis would happen even if fossil fuel emissions are cut according to terms agreed upon in the Paris climate agreement of 2015, unless our ties with food and land change.

Human activity directly affects over 70% of the global ice-free land surface. Deforestation, agriculture and other land use activities now account for 23% of the total human-caused greenhouse gas emissions. Since 1961, the per capita supply of vegetable oil and meat has more than doubled. About 30% of the total food produced is wasted.

These factors contribute to significant greenhouse gas emissions, the report said.

The global population is using land and freshwater resources at an ‘unprecedented’ rate with agriculture accounting for about 70% of global fresh water use. In addition to increased greenhouse gas emissions, this has led to the loss of natural ecosystems and biodiversity and has speeded up the process of land degradation and desertification which are already exacerbated due to climate change.

The first UN report in this series had made a grim prediction of rising global temperature. Photo: Craig ONeal/Flickr (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)

The report has also found that the rate of soil erosion is up to 100 times higher than the rate of soil formation on lands that are being tilled and up to 20 times higher on lands that are not being tilled.

Also read | It’s Raining Sand: How Anantapur Came to Resemble a Desert

This problem becomes particularly acute because climate change causes more land degradation and more land degradation in turn results in more climate change. As land degrades, its ability to absorb carbon dioxide reduces, which in turn fuels climate change. 

The IPCC report, approved by members of the UN, focuses on land and is the second in a series of special focus reports of the panel.

The first report, released in October last year, warned that the world is warming faster than was previously thought and that a global temperature rise of 1.5° Celsius is likely between 2030 and 2052.

Forests act as carbon sinks by absorbing carbon dioxide. Photo: Clive Varley/Flickr (CC BY 2.0)

Unsustainable use of land worsening matters

The latest IPCC report has argued that the rise in global warming as a result of human-caused greenhouse gas emissions is, in part, a result of the unsustainable use of land for agriculture, forestry and livestock rearing.

Loss of forest cover has also contributed to the crisis. Forests act as carbon sinks by absorbing it from the air and reducing the impact of carbon emission on global temperatures.

Also read: New Carbon Dioxide Emissions Data Shakes up Our Vision of Earth’s Future

Increased consumption of meat too has added to the problem. The supply of meat depends on the use of land for livestock grazing and cultivation of animal feed. As more land is cleared for these, deforestation increases.

This, in turn, means that absorption of carbon from the air reduces, leaving it in the atmosphere and adding to global warming. To make matters worse, the animals themselves emit another greenhouse gas – methane.

Consequently, the IPCC has recommended a change in dietary habits. “Balanced diets featuring plant-based foods, such as coarse grains, legumes, fruits and vegetables, and animal-sourced food produced sustainably in low greenhouse gas emission systems, present major opportunities for adaptation to and limiting climate change,” said Debra Roberts, co-chair of the IPCC’s working group two.

To help combat global warming, afforestation needs to happen at a faster rate than deforestation. Photo: World Resources Institute/Flickr (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0)

Land as an ally

Amidst the gloom, the IPCC has also seen some light in the capacity of land to act as an ally in the fight against climate change. “Sustainable land management can contribute to reducing the negative impacts of multiple stressors, including climate change, on ecosystems and societies,” it said. While land is a source, it is also a sink of greenhouse gases.

But the world’s current land use patterns will have to change for it to stand a chance of staying ‘well below’ 2° Celsius of global warming, as was envisaged in the Paris agreement. 

Afforestation, for example, can help combat climate change by absorbing and removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. Carbon is stored in tree trunks, roots, branches and leaves. More forests will mean that the earth’s ability to sequester carbon dioxide will increase.

But for this to happen, afforestation would need to take place at a rate faster than deforestation. Current patterns, however, are worrying. The Amazon rainforest – the world’s largest tropical forest – is being cut at an alarming rate. Deforestation in the part of the rainforest contained in Brazil increased 88% between June 2019 and 2018.

Also read: What the UN Can Do to Stop Brazil’s Rapid Deforestation

Restoration of peatlands is critical as they can sequester carbon for centuries, the report said. It has also argued that increased food productivity, more climate friendly dietary choices and reduction of food wastage can reduce the demand for more land to be used for the purposes of supplying food. Potentially, this could also free up land that can then be used to implement other strategies of combating climate change.

Desertification has stood in the way of curtailing carbon emission. Photo: Reuters

The report sees another benefit in ‘avoiding, reducing and reversing’ desertification as doing this would ‘enhance soil fertility, increase carbon storage in soils and biomass, while benefitting agricultural productivity and food security.’

“There is real potential here through more sustainable land use, reducing over consumption and waste of food, eliminating the clearing and burning of forests, preventing over harvesting of fuelwood, and reducing greenhouse gas emissions, thus helping to address land-related climate change issues,” said Panmao Zhai, co-chair of the IPCC’s working group one.

This potential can be realised only if the world acts now. The more time taken to act, the more carbon will be released into the atmosphere, which in turn will need larger amounts of land to sequester the additional carbon. 

Not only that, land may well turn to an adversary from an ally. Increased emissions will lead to ‘irreversible impacts on some ecosystems’ which could in turn mean substantial additional greenhouse gas emissions from those eco systems, thereby accelerating climate change.

The report also makes it clear that acting on sustainable land use alone will not solve the problem. Reducing fossil fuel emissions remains key. 

It’s Raining Sand: How Anantapur Came to Resemble a Desert

Crop pattern changes, waning forest cover, an explosion of borewells and other factors have had dramatic effects on land, water and climate.

Anantapur, Andhra Pradesh: It’s a classic Indian cinema fight-in-the-desert scene. Against the background of dunes and depressions with a tiny sprinkling of scrub vegetation, the hero rises from the burning sands of a barren wasteland to beat the bad guys to a pulp. Adding plenty of heat and dust to that already bestowed by nature, he brings the film to a happy conclusion (except for the villains). Countless Indian movies have staged those scenes in some desolate wilderness of Rajasthan. Or even in the ravines of the Chambal valley in Madhya Pradesh.

Only, this arid wilderness scene (see video clip) used no locations from Rajasthan or the Chambal. It was shot deep in the southern peninsula, in Andhra Pradesh’s Rayalaseema region. This specific patch of some 1,000 acres in Anantapur district – once covered by millet cultivation – has over many decades become more and more a desert. That has been driven by often paradoxical factors – and created the kind of space that filmmakers send out location scouts to look for.

In Dargah Honnur village, where the major landowners of this patch reside, it was difficult to get anyone to believe we were not movie location scouts. “Which film is this for? When is it coming?” was either an explicit question or one on their minds. With some, you could see a quick ebbing of interest when they learned we were journalists.

The makers of the Telugu film that made the place famous – Jayam Manade Raa (Victory is Ours) – shot those fight scenes here between 1998 and 2000. Like any diligent commercial filmmakers would, they tinkered with their ‘set’ to enhance the desert effect. “We had to uproot our crop (for which they compensated us),” says Pujari Linganna, 45, whose family owns the 34 acres where the fight was shot. “We also removed some vegetation and small trees so it would look more real.” Deft camerawork and the intelligent use of filters did the rest.

If the makers of Jayam Manade Raa were shooting a 20-years-after sequel today, they would have to do much less. Time and tormented nature, and relentless human intervention, have effected all the desert enhancements they could ask for.

20 years ago, Pujari Linganna had to uproot vegetation for a film shoot. Today, time and human actions have brought the same desert enhancements. Photo: Rahul M./PARI.

But it’s a curious desert patch. There is still cultivation – because there is still groundwater very close to surface. “We hit water in this patch at just 15 feet below,” says P. Honnureddy, Linganna’s son. In much of Anantapur, borewells won’t find water before 500-600 feet. In parts of the district, they have breached the 1,000-foot mark. Yet here is water gushing out of a four-inch borewell as we speak. That much water, so close to the surface, in this hot and sandy patch?

Also read: Climate Change Harming Agriculture, India’s Wheat Production Could Fall By 23%: Ministry

“That whole area lies in an extended riverbed,” explains Palthuru Mukanna, a farmer from a nearby village. What river? We can see nothing. “They built a dam [around five] decades ago, some 25-30 kilometres from Honnur, on the Vedavathi river that ran through here. Our stretch of Vedavathi (a tributary of the Tungabhadra – also called the Aghari) simply dried up.”

“That is indeed what happened,” says Malla Reddy of the Ecology Centre (of Anantapur’s Rural Development Trust) – few know this region as well as he does. “And the river may be dead but, over centuries, it helped create an underground reservoir of water that is now being relentlessly mined and extracted. At a rate which signals a coming disaster.”

That disaster won’t be long in coming. “There was hardly a single bore 20 years ago,” says V.L. Himachal, 46, a farmer with 12.5 acres in the desertified area. “It was all rainfed agriculture. Now there are between 300-400 borewells in about 1,000 acres. And we strike water by 30-35 feet, sometimes higher.” That’s one borewell to every three acres, or less.

That’s high density, even for Anantapur which, as Malla Reddy points out, “has close to 270,000 borewells, though the carrying capacity of the district is 70,000. And almost half this huge number are dry this year.”

So what are the borewells in these badlands for? What’s being cultivated? What sticks out in the patch we’re exploring is not even the district’s all-pervasive groundnut crop, but bajra. That millet is cultivated here for seed multiplication. Not for consumption or the market, but for seed companies who have contracted the farmers for this job. You can see male and female plants laid out neatly in adjacent rows. The companies are creating a hybrid from two different strains of bajra. This operation will take a great deal of water. What’s left of the plant after seed extraction will at best serve as fodder.

“We get Rs 3,800 per quintal for this seed replication work,” says Pujari Linganna. That seems low, given the labour and care involved – and the fact that the companies will sell those seeds to the same class of farmers at very high prices. Another cultivator on this patch, Y.S. Shantamma, says her family gets Rs 3,700 a quintal.

Shantamma and her daughter Vandakshi say the problem of cultivating here is not water. “We even get water in the village though we have no piped connection at home.” Their headache is the sand which – besides the huge volume that already exists – can accumulate very rapidly. And trudging across even short distances on sand several feet deep can be tiring.

Y. S. Shantamma and her daughter Vandakshi say, ‘It [the sand] can simply destroy the work you’ve put in’. Photo: P. Sainath/PARI

“It can simply destroy the work you’ve put in,” say mother and daughter. P. Honnureddy agrees, showing us the stretch beneath a sand dune where he had painstakingly laid out rows of plants – not four days ago. Now they are just furrows covered in sand. This place, part of an increasingly arid zone which sees strong winds hit the village, has sandstorms.

“Three months in the year – it’s raining sand in this village,” says M. Basha, another desert cultivator.  “It comes into our homes; it gets into our food.”  The winds bring sand flying into even those homes not so close to the dunes. Nettings or extra doors don’t always work. Isaka varsham [sand rain] are part of our lives now, we just live with it.”

The sands are not strangers to Dargah Honnur village. “But yes, their intensity has risen,” says Himachal. A lot of shrubbery and little trees that formed serious wind barriers have gone. Himachal speaks knowledgably of the impact of globalisation and market economics. “Now we calculate everything in cash. The shrubs, trees and vegetation went because people wanted to use every inch of land for commercial cultivation.” And “if sands fall when seeds are in germination or sprouting,” says farmer M. Tippaiah, 55,  “the damage is total.”  Yields are lower despite their access to water. “We get three quintals of groundnut an acre, at best four,” says farmer K.C. Honnur Swamy, 32. The district’s average yield is around five.

They see no value in natural wind barriers? “They will only go for trees that have commercial value,” says Himachal. Which, unsuited to these conditions, may not grow here at all. “And anyway, the authorities keep saying they will help with trees, but that hasn’t happened.”

Also read: As Farmers March to Delhi, Climate Change Fuels Their Larger Crisis

 “A few years ago,” says Palthuru Mukanna, “several government officials drove out into the dunes area for an inspection.” The desert safari ended badly and their SUV, mired in the sands, had to be towed out by the villagers with a tractor. “We haven’t seen any more of them since,” Mukanna adds. There are also periods, says farmer Mokha Rakesh, “when the bus cannot go that side of the village at all.”

The loss of shrub and forest is a problem across the entire Rayalaseema region. In Anantapur district alone, 11% of area is classified as ‘forest’. Actual forest cover has dwindled to less than 2%. That has had the inevitable impact on soil, air, water, and temperatures. The only large forest you see in Anantapur is the jungle of windmills – thousands of them – dotting the landscape everywhere, even bordering the mini-desert. These have come up on land purchased or leased long-term, by windmill companies.

Back in Dargah Honnur, a group of desert-patch cultivators assures us that things were always this way. They then go on to present compelling evidence to the contrary. The sands have always been there, yes. But their force, producing sandstorms, has grown. There was more shrub and cover earlier. Very little now. They’ve always had water, yes, but we learn later of the death of their river. That there were very few borewells two decades ago, hundreds now. Every one of them recalls a spike in the number of extreme weather episodes these past two decades.

Rainfall patterns have changed. “In terms of when we need the rains, I’d say they are 60% less,” says Himachal. “There’s less rains around Ugadi [Telugu New Year’s Day, usually in April] these past few years.” Anantapur is touched – gingerly – by both south-west and north-east monsoons but derives the full-benefit of neither.

Even in years when the district receives its annual average rainfall of 535 mm – the timing, spread and dispersal have been terribly erratic. In some years, the rains have moved from crop to non-crop seasons. Sometimes, there’s been a huge downpour in the first 24-48 hours and great dry spells afterwards. Last year, some mandals saw dry spells of almost 75 days during the crop season (June to October). With 75% of Anantapur’s population in rural areas and 80% of all workers engaged in agriculture (either as farmers or labourers), this proves devastating.

“There have been just two really ‘normal’ years in Anantapur in each of the last two decades,” says Malla Reddy of the Ecology Centre. “In every one of the remaining 16 years, two-thirds to three-fourths of the district has been declared as drought-affected. In the 20 years prior to that period, it was three droughts every decade. The changes that began in the late 1980s have hastened every year.”

A district once home to a multitude of millets switched increasingly to commercial crops like groundnut. And saw, correspondingly, a massive sinking of borewells. (A report of the National Rainfed Area Authority says there are now “pockets where groundwater exploitation has exceeded 100%.”)

“Forty years ago, we had a clear pattern – three droughts in 10 years – and farmers knew what to plant. There were between 9 and 12 diverse crops and a stable cultivation cycle,” says C.K. ‘Bablu’ Ganguly. He leads the Timbaktu Collective, an NGO which for three decades has focused on the economic betterment of the rural poor in this region. His own four-decade engagement here has given him tremendous insight into the region’s farming.

“Groundnut [now covering 69% of cultivated area in Anantapur] did to us what it did to the Sahel in Africa. The monocropping we descended into didn’t just alter the water situation. Groundnut can’t take shade, people remove trees. Anantapur’s soil was destroyed. Millets were decimated. The moisture is gone, making a return to rainfed agriculture difficult.” Crop changes also undermined the role of women in farming. Traditionally, they were custodians of the seeds of the diverse rainfed crops grown here. Once farmers began to buy seed on the market for the cash crop hybrids that took over Anantapur (as with groundnut), the role of women was reduced largely to that of labourers. Also lost, over two generations, were the skills of many farmers in the complex art of growing multiple, varied crops on the same fields.

Linganna’s grandson Honnur Swamy (top row, left) and Nagaraju (top row, right) are desert cultivators now, whose tractors and and bullock carts (bottom row) leave deep furrows in the sand. (Photos: Top left and bottom left: Rahul M./PARI. Top right and bottom right: Photo: P. Sainath/PARI)

Fodder crops now account for less than 3% of cultivated area. “Anantapur once had one of the highest numbers of small ruminants in the country,” Ganguly says. “Small ruminants are the best asset – mobile property – of ancient communities of traditional herders like the Kurubas. The traditional cycle where the herders’ flocks provided post-harvest manure to the farmers’ fields in the form of dung and urine – that’s disrupted by changing crop patterns and chemical agriculture. Planning for this region has proved hostile to the marginalised.”

Himachal in Honnur recognises the shrinking agricultural biodiversity around him and its consequences. “Once, in this very village, we had bajra, cowpea, pigeon pea, ragi, foxtail millet, green gram, field beans…” he rattles off a list. “Much easier to cultivate, but rainfed agriculture doesn’t bring us cash.” Groundnut did, for a while.

The crop cycle of groundnuts is around 110 days. Of those, it only covers the soil, protecting it from erosion, for 60-70 days. In the era when nine different millets and pulses were grown, those offered the topsoil a protective shade cover from June to February each year, with one or the other crop always on the ground.

Also read: Can Agriculture Eradicate Economic Inequality and Sustain Ecological Balance?

Back in Honnur, Himachal is reflective. He knows that borewells and cash crops brought great benefits to the farmers. He also sees the declining trend in that – and the growing out-migrations as livelihoods shrink. “There are always over 200 families seeking work outside,” says Himachal. That’s a sixth of the 1,227 households the 2011 Census records for this village in Anantapur’s Bommanahal mandal. “Around 70-80% of all households are in debt,” he adds. Farm distress has been high across Anantapur for two decades – and it is the district in Andhra Pradesh worst affected by farmer suicides.

“The boom time of borewells is gone,” says Malla Reddy. “So is that of cash crop and monocultures.”  All three still proliferate, though, driven by that fundamental shift from production for consumption to “creating products for unknown markets.”

If climate change is simply about nature pressing its reset button, then what was it we saw in Honnur and Anantapur? Also, as the scientists tell us, climate change occurs across very vast natural regions and zones – Honnur and Anantapur are administrative units, mere specks, too small to qualify. Can it be that large canvas changes across much greater regions might sometimes aggravate existing freakish features of sub-regions within them?

Almost all the elements of change here resulted from human intervention. The ‘borewell epidemic’, the massive switch to commercial cropping and monocultures; the loss of biodiversity that could be Anantapur’s best defence against climate change; the ongoing exhaustion of the aquifer; the devastation of the little forest cover this semi-arid region had; the harming of the grassland ecology and a serious degradation of the soil; the industry-driven intensification of chemical agriculture; the crumbling of symbiotic relationships between farm and forest, shepherds and farmers – and the loss of livelihoods; the death of rivers. All these have clearly impacted temperatures, weather and climate – which have in turn further aggravated these processes.

If human agency, driven by a model of economics and development gone berserk, is a major driving factor in the changes upon us, there’s plenty to be learned from this region and many like it.

“Maybe we ought to shut down the borewells and return to rainfed farming,” says Himachal. “But it’s too difficult.”

P. Sainath is the founder editor of the People’s Archive of Rural India.

PARI’s nationwide reporting project on climate change is part of a UNDP-supported initiative to capture that phenomenon through the voices and lived experience of ordinary people.

This article was originally published in the People’s Archive of Rural India on July 8, 2019.

Africa’s Great Green Wall Suffers From a Major Mismatch Between Ambition and Effort

Even though unrealistic targets and poor ground-level implementation have hobbled the multi-national initiative, it should be fixed rather than abandoned.

Even though changing, unrealistic targets and poor ground-level implementation have hobbled the multi-national initiative, it should be fixed rather than abandoned.

By the end of the 1990s, the idea of encroaching deserts had become difficult to defend. Credit: International Federation of Red Cross/Flickr

Africa’s Great Green Wall, or more formally The Great Green Wall for the Sahara and the Sahel Initiative, is the intriguing but misleading name of an enormously ambitious and worthwhile initiative to improve life and resilience in the drylands that surround the Sahara.

The idea of a Great Green Wall has come a long way since its inception. Its origin goes back to colonial times. In 1927, the French colonial forester Louis Lavauden coined the word desertification to suggest that deserts are spreading due to deforestation, overgrazing and arid land degradation. In 1952, the English forester Richard St. Barbe Baker suggested that a “green front” in the form of a 50 km wide barrier of trees be erected to contain the spreading desert.

Droughts in the Horn of Africa and the Sahel from the 1970s onwards gave wings to the idea, and in 2007 the African Union approved the Great Green Wall Initiative. Many perceived it as a plan to build an almost 8,000 km long, 15 km wide wall of trees across the African continent – from Senegal in the west to Djibouti in the east.

This plan faced a great deal of criticism. It led to a clearer vision being endorsed under the same name five years later when the African Ministerial Conference on Environment adopted a harmonised regional strategy.

Can the vision ever come to fruition?

Only if there’s a ten-fold (at least) increase in pace so that the progress on the ground becomes consistent with lofty political ambitions. Sadly, the wall suffers from a major mismatch between ambition and effort. But that’s not to say it should be ditched.

Why did the vision change?

Critics argue that a desert is a healthy, natural ecosystem that shouldn’t be thought of as a disease. Nor, they argue, is it spreading like a disease. In fact, by the end of the 1990s, the idea of encroaching deserts had become difficult to defend against scientific evidence that climate variability was to blame.

Critics have also pointed out that the vision of a barrier is counter-productive to the development objective as it draws attention to the perimeter of the land rather than to the land itself. To boost food security and support local communities it is better to focus on the wide field rather than its narrow edge. The development objective is important – an estimated 232 million people live in the general area of the Great Green Wall.

This led to the clarified vision keeping the wall in name, but it has been bent almost beyond recognition.

The wall is no longer seen as a narrow band of trees along the southern edge of the Sahara. The vision is now to surround the Sahara with a wide belt of vegetation – trees and bushes greening and protecting an agricultural landscape. The new vision engages all the countries surrounding it, including Algeria and others in North Africa, not just the 11 original sub-Saharan countries of the Sahel.

Thus, the Great Green Wall is no longer a wall. Nor is it great – not yet anyway.

Unrealistic ambitions

A simple analysis gives a clear indication of how difficult it will be to realise the Great Green Wall within agreed timelines.

A recent analysis by the Food and Agriculture Organisation suggests that 128 million hectares have a tree cover below the “better half” of comparable landscapes in the two aridity zones that straddle the 400 mm rainfall line around the Sahara.

If one assumes that half of this (65 million hectares, or 8% of the total area in these aridity zones) needs intervention, and that the United Nations’ 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development sets the target date for completion, then the Great Green Wall initiative should be treating an average of five million hectares per year (ten million hectares is the ambition to bring all lands up to the level of the better half). A less ambitious target date would be set by the African Union’s Agenda 2063 but even then an average treatment of two million hectares per year would be needed.

The actual intervention area is not known but is likely to be far less, no more than 200,000 hectares per year and probably less. At this pace, a century is an optimistic prediction of the time it will take to complete the Wall.

A massive increase in speed – at least ten-fold – is required if the Wall is to become great in our lifetime. More resources will clearly be needed but a ten-fold increase is unlikely. What to do?

Re-greening options

Many people assume that the wall can only be built by planting trees. But tree planting is not always needed. Some of the less dry lands can be treated by techniques that rely on the capacity of the land to regreen itself – its ecological memory.

Floods and animals move seeds to places where they can sprout and root systems of former trees are sometimes capable of producing new shoots. Sprouting roots could live as the roots are already established – unlike newly planted seedlings. These could rapidly re-green a landscape, reducing the need for tree planting, as long as farmers protect them from fire and cattle.

This technique – known as farmer-managed natural regeneration – has proven to produce good results at low cost in areas where the ecological memory is sufficient for sprouts to come up by themselves and where farmers have the right to use the trees once they get big. The potential to scale it up is significant.

But farmer-managed natural regeneration will not work everywhere. Other methods are needed too, such as digging half-moons (to capture water) and planting seedlings. Doing a better job of applying the right method to the right place may be the quickest and most feasible way to speed the making of the Great Green Wall.

Lars Laestadius, Adjunct Lecturer, Swedish University of Agricultural Sciences

This article was originally published on The Conversation. Read the original article.

Africa Could Help Feed the World – But Only if Its Fertile Land Doesn’t Disappear

Two-thirds of the African continent is desert or drylands and nearly 75% of agricultural land is estimated to be degraded to varying degrees.

Two-thirds of the African continent is desert or drylands and nearly 75% of agricultural land is estimated to be degraded to varying degrees.

From left to right: Heads of state Mahamadou Issoufou of Niger, Roch Marc Christian Kabore of Burkina Faso and Ibrahim Boubacar Keita of Mali at the celebration of the World Day to Combat Desertification. Credits: IPS/Younouss Youn

Ouagadougou: The 23rd World Day to Combat Desertification was observed in Burkina Faso’s capital of Ouagadougou on June 15 with a call to create two million jobs and restore 10 million hectares of degraded land.

Three African heads of state took part in the celebrations: Ibrahim Boubacar Kéita from Mali, Mahamadou Issoufou from Niger and Roch Kaboré from Burkina Faso. The executive secretary of the UN Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) Monique Barbut also attended the event.

According to the UNCCD, two-thirds of the African continent is desert or drylands. This land is vital for agriculture and food production, but nearly 75% is estimated to be degraded to varying degrees.

The region is also affected by frequent and severe droughts, which have been particularly devastating in recent years in the Horn of Africa and the Sahel.

“Degraded lands is not an inevitable fate. Restoration is still possible. However, what will be more difficult is to feed 10 billion human beings in 30 years. The only place where there are still lands to do that is Africa. We need these lands to feed the whole planet. Therefore restoring lands is assuring food security for the whole planet,” said Barbut.

The high-level meeting that gathered 400 experts from around the world ended in the Call from Ouagadougou, urging citizens and governments to tackle desertification by restoring ten million hectares of land and by creating two million green jobs for youth, women and migrants.

“By 2050, the African population will double to two billion people,” Barbut noted. “I fear that as the population depends up to 80% on natural resources for their livelihoods, those resources will vanish given the great pressure on them.”

She added that young people emerging from this demographic growth will need decent jobs.

“In the next 15 years, 375 million young people will be entering the job market in Africa. Two hundred million of them will live in rural areas and 60 million will be obliged to leave those areas because of the pressure on natural resources.”

According to UNCCD, it is critical to enact policies that enable young people to own and rehabilitate degraded land, as there are nearly 500 million hectares of once fertile agricultural land that have been abandoned.

Talking specifically about Burkina Faso, which hosted the celebration, Batio Nestor Bassiere, the minister in charge of environmental issues, said, “From 2002 to 2013, 5.16 million hectares, 19% of the country’s territory, has been degraded by desertification.”

The situation is similar in most African countries. That’s why “it’s nonsense to sit and watch that happening without acting, given that the means for action are available,” said Barbut.

The Call from Ouagadougou comes from a common willingness to save the planet and Africa particularly from desertification. Gathered to discuss the topic ‘Our land, our house, our future’linked to the fulfilment of the 3S Initiative (sustainability, stability and security in Africa), the Call from Ouagadougou also invites African countries to create conditions for the development of new job opportunities by targeting the places where the access to land can be reinforced and land rights secured for vulnerable populations.

Development partners and other actors have also been called on to give their contributions. They were invited to help African countries to invest in rural infrastructure, land restoration, and the development of skills in chosen areas and among those facing migration and social risks.

For that, the UN agency in charge of the fight against desertification and its partners can rely on the firm support of the three heads of state who came for this 23rd World Day to Combat Desertification.

The president of Burkina Faso, Roch Kaboré, let the audience know that they are all “engaged to promote regional and global partnerships to find funds for investment in lands restoration and long term land management, wherever they will have opportunities to speak.”

Representing the African Union, Ahmed Elmekaa, director, African Union/SAFGRAD, said drawing attention to the resolutions of desertification, land degradation and drought and on climate change are at the top of the African Union’s environmental agenda.

Taking advantage of the celebration, the national authorities gave the name of the very first executive secretary of the UN Convention to Combat Desertification, Hama Arba Diallo, to a street of the capital Ouagadougou. Experts from many countries also had the opportunity to visit sites showing the experience of Burkina Faso in combating desertification.

At a dinner ceremony held immediately following the closure of the ceremony, the UNCCD announced the winners of the Land for Life Award, Practical Action Sudan/UNEP from Sudan; Watershed Organisation Trust from India. The Land for Life China award was given to Yingzhen Pan, director general of National Bureau to Combat Desertification, China.

(IPS)

Drought Pushed a Third of Somalia’s Population to Extreme Hunger

In Somalia, the UN reports that 3.2 million people – that’s one third of its estimated 11 million inhabitants, are now on a ‘hunger knife-edge.’

In Somalia, the UN reports that 3.2 million people – that’s one third of its estimated 11 million inhabitants, are now on a ‘hunger knife-edge.’

FAO massive famine-prevention campaign in Somalia – 12 million animals treated so far against livestock diseases and illness. Credit: FAO

Rome: Another famine in former European colonies in Africa and another time in its Eastern region, with Ethiopia and Somalia among the major victims of drought and made-made climate disasters mainly caused by US and European multinational business.

While an estimated 7.8 million people are food insecure in Ethiopia, where drought has dented crop and pasture output in southern regions, in the specific case of Somalia, the UN reports that 3.2 million people – that’s one third of its estimated 11 million inhabitants, are now on a ‘hunger knife-edge.’

Meanwhile, more than six million people are affected, of whom only about three million have been reached with food rations.

Key numbers

  • Animals provided with life-sustaining care so far: 12.3 million
  • People supported by those animals: 1.8 million pastoralists
  • Approximate cost of each FAO treatment per animal: $0.40
  • Cost to a pastoralist to replace one dead animal: $40
  • Cumulative value of prevented livestock losses so far: $492 million

“The humanitarian crisis has deteriorated more rapidly than was originally projected,” the Deputy Special Representative of the Secretary-General for Somalia, Raisedon Zenenga, few weeks ago told the Council in New York.

People are forced to migrate

“People are dying and need protection, particularly women and children, as drought conditions force them to migrate from rural areas to town, and as sexual violence increases in displacement camps.”

Worldwide, land degradation, severe droughts and advancing desertification are set to force populations to flee their homes and migrate.

Over the next few decades, worldwide, close to 135 million people are at risk of being permanently displaced by desertification and land degradation, says Monique Barbut, executive secretary of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD).

“If they don’t migrate, the young and unemployed are also at more risk of falling victim to extremist groups that exploit and recruit the disillusioned and vulnerable, “ added Barbut in her message on the occasion of this year’s World Day to Combat Desertification (WDCD) marked on June 17.

They are missing out on the opportunity to benefit from increasing global demand and wider sustained economic growth. In fact, the economic losses they suffer and growing inequalities they perceive means many people feel they are being left behind, Barbut said.

“They look for a route out. Migration is well-trodden path. People have always migrated, on a temporary basis, to survive when times are tough. The ambitious often chose to move for a better job and a brighter future.”

Famine-prevention: The livestock protection campaign is vital for vulnerable pastoralists who rely on their animals to survive. Credit: FAO

One in every five youth, aged 15-24 years, for example is willing to migrate to another country, she noted, adding that youth in poorer countries are even more willing to migrate for a chance to lift themselves out of poverty.

“It is becoming clear though that the element of hope and choice in migration is increasingly missing. Once, migration was temporary or ambitious. Now, it is often permanent and distressed.”

Saving animals saves human lives, livelihoods 

In parallel, concerned UN agencies have been strongly mobilised to help mitigate the new famine facing African countries. One of them, the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations (FAO), has been pushing forward with a massive campaign that has so far treated more than 12 million animals in less than three months.

The objective is to protect the livelihoods of hundreds of thousands of families who rely on their livestock’s meat and milk for survival. By mid-July, the UN specialised body will have reached 22 million animals, benefiting over 3 million people.

“Saving animals saves human lives and livelihoods. When animals are weakened by drought, they stop producing milk or die which means people go hungry and families are pushed out of self-reliance,” said Richard Trenchard, FAO Representative in Somalia.

Worsening drought conditions have left hundreds of thousands of Somalis facing severe food and water shortages. Credit: OCHA Somalia

Around 3.2 million people in Somalia are on a hunger knife-edge, the agency reports, adding that the majority live in rural areas and livestock such as goats, camels, sheep and cattle are their main source of food and income.

“What we have heard again and again from displaced people in camps is that when they lost their animals, everything collapsed. It is a steep, long climb for them to get back on their feet again. We have stepped up our response to reach families before that happens,” added Trenchard. “Livelihoods are their best defence against famine”.

In Somalia, 6.7 million people face acute hunger as threat of famine persists, according to a FAO new assessment.

The UN agency is deploying 150 veterinary teams across Somalia to treat goats and sheep as well as cattle and camels – up to 270,000 animals each day. The teams are made up of local Somali veterinary professionals.

Simple, cost-effective care

Livestock badly weakened by the lack of feed and water are highly susceptible to illnesses and parasites but are too weak to withstand vaccination, the specialised organisation reports.

As part of an integrated response program to improve the conditions of livestock, animals are treated with multivitamin boosters, medicines that kill off internal and external parasites, deworming, and other treatments to fight respiratory infections.

The simple and cost-effective care being provided by the FAO vet teams is reinforcing animals’ coping capacity and keeping them alive and productive. (See Key Numbers).

Meanwhile, through its Famine Prevention and Drought Response Plan, the UN specialised body is delivering large-scale, strategic combinations of assistance to prevent famine in Somalia.

In addition to livestock treatments, this includes giving rural families cash for food purchases, helping communities rehabilitate agricultural infrastructure, and providing farmers with vouchers for locally-sourced seeds along with tractor services that reduce their labour burden.

Any serious reaction from Africa’s former colonisers?

This article was originally published on Inter Press Service. Read the original article here

Tibet Faces Grim Scenario with Glaciers on Retreat

Kharola glacier. credit: Eric/Flickr CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

Kharola glacier. credit: Eric/Flickr CC BY-NC-ND 2.0

Beijing:  Tibet is facing a grim scenario as its glaciers, the source of key rivers like Brahmaputra, are retreating and natural disasters are on the rise due to climate change, according to a new report.

The glacier on the Tibetan plateau has been backing off since the 20th century due to rising temperature and doing so at a faster speed since the 1990s, a scientific evaluation report on environmental change of the Tibetan plateau published by the Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research under the Chinese Academy of Sciences said.

The glacier’s response to climate change can be best seen in its progress or retreat.

Glacier loss in the Tibetan plateau is most prominent in the Himalayan mountains and southeastern Tibet, whereas the glacier stays relevantly stable, even progressing, in the Karakoram and Western Kunlun region due to increasing precipitation, the report said.

The report also said natural disasters are on the rise on the Tibetan plateau due to global warming and increased human activity.

Tibet, with an average altitude of over 4,500 metres is also called the roof of the world.

It said disasters including landslides, torrential floods and snow disasters are expected to increase and fires in the region will be more difficult to prevent and extinguish.

The report warned that iced lakes and barrier lakes on the plateau are also posing a threat as more than 20 overflowed during the 20th century, leading to severe disasters in the region.

According to the report, about 1,500 mountain torrents were reported on the plateau from 1950 to 2010, with the worst in 1998 when more than 50 counties in Tibet were affected, state-run Xinhua news agency said.

The floods on the plateau are attributed to frequent extreme precipitation during rainy seasons.

On the positive side, the report said the number and area of lakes on the Tibetan plateau increased notably.

The number of lakes exceeding 1 square km climbed from 1,081 in the 1970s to 1,236 in 2010, and 80% of the lakes in the region have been expanding.

The report also forecast that in the future, from 2015 to as far as 2100, the dominant changes in water bodies of the region would be a retreating glacier, reduced snow cover and rising river run-off.

The overall situation of the ecological system on the Tibetan plateau is improving as the boundaries of frigid and sub-frigid zones are moving westward and northward.

The temperate zone is expanding, according to the report.

The area of the arctic-alpine steppe is increasing and the growth period is extending, while meadows are shrinking.

The report also noted that the area and growing stock of forest on the plateau have increased significantly since 1998, from 7.29 million hectares in 1997 to 14.72 million hectares in 2013 and 2.09 billion cubic meters in 1997 to 2.26 billion cubic meters in 2013, respectively.

The increase is mainly attributed to efforts of forestry conservation and restoration, the report said.

The scope of arable land has been expanding since the mid 1970s, which helps increase the income of farmers and herdsmen, the report said.

But the report warned of the degeneration of the wetlands and frozen earth as well as accelerating desertification.

It predicted that the frozen earth will continue to shrink from 2015 to 2100.

With an average altitude of over 4,500 meters, the Tibetan plateau, which is known as the core of “the Third Pole,” refers to the areas mainly within southwest China’s Tibet Autonomous Region.

As one of the major forests in China, the risk of fire is high due to strong wind and lack of rain and snow, it said.

From 1988 to 2014, a total of 373 forest fires were reported, according to the report.

In addition, the scale of snow storms and avalanches has expanded markedly over the past 40 years under the influence of climate change, affecting human activities and the climate in the north hemisphere, the report said.

In 2011, WikiLeaks reported the contents of a cable from the US ambassador in New Delhi in which he  reported the views of the Dalai Lama on the shrinking of Tibetan glaciers:

The Dalai Lama argued that the political agenda should be sidelined for five to ten years and the international community should shift its focus to climate change on the Tibetan plateau. Melting glaciers, deforestation, and increasingly polluted water from mining projects were problems that “cannot wait.”

PTI. With inputs from The Wire‘s staff.