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UN warns increasing drought and desertification threatens food insecurity.
As climate change and land degradation are noted to cause increasing drought and aridity across the world, food and water shortages are also growing more severe, linked at times to both conflict and forced migration.

According to Executive Secretary of the UN Convention to Combat Desertification Luc Gnacadja, nearly 2 billion hectares of land has been degraded since 1950, with 12 million hectares being lost annually, which is now increasing with global warming. These changes in turn have caused weather shifts including reduced crop harvests at a time when rising food demands are estimated to require a 70% boost in food production by 2050.

Moreover, 44% of the world's food is produced in arid dryland regions where resource allocation is already an issue. Executive Secretary Gnacadja said, “The drylands are the most conflict-prone zone of the world, and that is not by accident. Instability is fuelled by precisely the quest of people to have access to very scarce resources like productive land and water.”

While vulnerable countries such as Niger, China and India have in recent years been making valiant efforts to curb desertification through activities like large scale-tree plantings, Mr. Gnacadja warns that more direct support is necessary to help those living in the dryland areas maintain food supplies as well as their homes.

He also said that a new desertification monitoring system is being launched in an effort to track land degradation and try to protect against it. Our appreciation, Mr. Gnacadja, the UN Convention to Combat Desertification and all others working to raise awareness of our fragile planet's need for urgent care.

Let us join in more sustainable practices so that the Earth may be renewed to continue supporting the lives of all beings. In a video message presented at a June 2009 climate change conference in Mexico, Supreme Master Ching Hai addressed the alarming consequences of drought and desertification, as well as the most effective way to stop them.

Supreme Master Ching Hai : We have to stop desertification. We can. Desertification is another climate change effect that is linked to livestock, again.

Overgrazing by livestock, which occupies nearly a third of our Earth's land surface worldwide, is a major cause of desertification and other damages, and is responsible for more than 50% of land erosion. Now, we must stop livestock grazing to protect our soil and protect our life.

In short, simply saying no to meat will make us richer, healthier, and most importantly, it will make us a wiser person, and a great hero. Because it is the only timely way that we ensure the survival of our children and grandchildren.
http://www.trust.org/alertnet/news/drought-and-desertification-a-growing-threat-to-food-security-un-expert
http://www.ifad.org/events/op/2010/qatar.htm

Extra News
Representatives of Tomini Bay Sustainable Coastal Livelihood and Management organization on Indonesia's Sulawesi island call for stricter government policies to protect vital coastal habitats, saying that at the current rate of deforestation, all mangrove forests in the region could be gone in less than 30 years.
http://www.antaranews.com/en/news/68268/mangrove-forests-in-sulawesi-to-vanish-by-2038,

Saying that Bahrain's marine life population has decreased by half over the past decade alone, experts from the UK-based engineering company Scott Wilson cite rising ocean temperatures as a primary cause, with more deaths expected if climate change continues.
http://www.gulf-daily-news.com/NewsDetails.aspx?storyid=297167