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16 May 2008

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UNESCO calls for measures to combat desertification

Some 400 scientists and policy-makers from the world’s arid regions meeting
in Tunis, Tunisia, urged that leaders to put sharper focus on efforts
to combat desertification, which threatens a third of the earth’s land
surface, the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization (UNESCO) said.

In what is being called the Tunis Declaration, adopted at the close of the
three-day Future of Drylands Conference, a highlight of the UN
International Year of Deserts and Desertification, participants pointed to
preservation of cultural and biological diversity, management of water
resources and identification of sustainable livelihoods for dryland
inhabitants as crucial issues in those regions.

In addition, they underlined the importance of supplying renewable energy
suitable for dryland development and creating management strategies for
natural and man-made disasters.

Desertification directly affects the lives of more than 250 million people
and threatens another 1.2 billion in 110 countries, according to UNESCO,
which co-organized the conference. An estimated 60 million of those
affected in sub-Saharan Africa are expected to move toward northern Africa
and Europe by 2020.

The economic impact is also considerable, the agency said. Lost
agricultural production due to drought and desertification costs an
estimated $42 billion annually. Another $2.4 billion is spent each year
fighting land degradation, and the problem is likely to worsen.

In his closing address at the conference, Walter Erdelen, Assistant
Director-General of UNESCO for Natural Sciences, expressed the hope that
the Declaration “will be a major step forward on the joint path of the
scientific community and decision-makers to help promote sustainable
development in the world’s drylands.”

Source: UN News

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