The immense challenge of desertification in sub-Saharan Africa

Today, dry areas represent more than 41% of land on the globe and they are home to more than two billion people.
They are the stage for the ongoing process of land degradation that is aggravated by climate fluctuations – particularly drought – and pressure exerted by human activities (including demographic growth and inappropriate management of natural resources). All of these factors strongly undermine the capacity of populations to adapt to an increasingly difficult environment.
In Africa , droughts had terrifying consequences in an already fragile context. The images of their effects still mark collective memory today. They were a determining factor in the holding of the United Nations Conference on Desertification in .
Beyond recognition by the international community (since the Rio Earth Summit in 1992, with the adoption of the ), we also face the question of our understanding and evaluation of the desertification process, and of sustainable solutions to fight it. The recent inclusion of the concept of "neutrality" in terms of land degradation in the United Nations' makes the battle against desertification a major issue for development, (re)connecting societies and environments, and human well-being.
Millions of hectares are disappearing
The situation is particularly sensitive in sub-Saharan countries, where over 80% of the economy is based on subsistence farming. According to Monique Barbut, UNCCD Executive Secretary, emphasised that almost are being lost each year globally, to desertification and drought, when 20 million tonnes of cereals could have been cultivated on this area.
La dégradation des sols, un problème planétaire qui affecte deux milliards d'êtres humains
— Conversation France (@FR_Conversation)
Despite the diversity and intensity of efforts to combat desertification, the challenge of land degradation in a time of climate change in Africa's arid areas remains unresolved. The , including food security, climate change, health, law and social equity.
However, the progressive growth of knowledge about the causes, mechanisms and consequences of desertification now allows us to devise new solutions, particularly when it comes to combating land and soil degradation.
Good practices to adopt
The success of such projects and programmes combating land and soil degradation depends on an understanding and in the territory concerned. This assessment prior to action should allow us to determine the type of degradation anywhere, its severity, its temporal dynamics, its spatial distribution according to the degradation factors, and the types and intensity of consequences both locally and at regional and international levels. This approach is indispensable for effective action.
over recent decades have improved our ability to combat desertification and preserving natural resources. However, efforts still need to be made, particularly to create a favourable socio-economic environment to support, promote and deploy such practices over larger regions.
To assess the state of knowledge on these issues, the Sahara and Sahel Observatory (OSS) and the French (IRD) recently produced a report, , that offers an unprecedented situational analysis. It can be or downloaded free of charge.
Achieving neutrality
The fight against desertification and land degradation requires the consideration of several temporal and spatial scales (from the agricultural plot and the basin, to farming, to village, communal, local, national or regional land), and levels of decision-making (from the family unit and local or regional government, to the State and international convention). It also must take into account various level of action and management, whether it be in understanding the mechanisms of land degradation, in the action itself or in its scientific, technical, administrative or political management.
Given recent technological innovations and human ingenuity, desertification is not an inevitability. However, nothing significant will happen if scientific, political and citizen mobilisation is not sustainably coordinated.
By starting work today on sustainably managing land and restoring degraded land, it is nevertheless possible to reach by 2030. On this subject, it is worth consulting the presented on 14 September during the UNCCD Conference of Parties in Ordos (China), devoted to sustainable land management for humans and the climate.
Provided by The Conversation
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