UN warns of 70 percent desertification by 2025
Drought could parch close to 70 percent of the planet's soil by 2025 unless countries implement policies to slow desertification, a senior United Nations official has warned.
"If we cannot find a solution to this problem... in 2025, close to 70 percent could be affected," Luc Gnacadja, executive secretary of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification, said Friday.
Drought currently affects at least 41 percent of the planet and environmental degradation has caused it to spike by 15 to 25 percent since 1990, according to a global climate report.
"There will not be global security without food security" in dry regions, Gnacadja said at the start of the ninth UN conference on the convention in the Argentine capital.
"A green deal is necessary" for developing countries working to combat drought, he stressed.
The next meeting on the convention is scheduled to take place in South Korea in 2010.
- Login to post comments


Similar
- Manufacturing a scientific scandal - climate change deniers exposed
- Roundup: Climate science in 2009
- Ove Hoegh-Guldberg discusses coral reefs, global warming, jobs and phasing out coal!
- Professor Schellnhuber of the Potsdam Institute talks pre industrial carbon levels for safe climate
- Mark Z Jacobson Professor at Stanford University talks about the current shift to renewable energy in the USA
Stationary Energy
Buy or Download Free

Download the full Zero Carbon Australia Stationary Energy Plan here (8.4MB).
Download the Synopsis of the plan here (2.2MB)
Buy Hard copies from the University of Melbourne Energy Institute.
About
Our goal is to facilitate the implementation of the social changes and technologies that will reduce the impacts of climate change and give our society and global ecosystems a chance of surviving into the future.
Beyond Zero Radio
Discussion Group
Next monthly discussion: 6.30pm Monday 6 September Professor Clive Hamilton, author of Requiem for a Species. Wood Theatre, Building 148, University of Melbourne

