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Page 1: The Cost of Action and of Inaction Against Land Degradation

Book Launch seminar, IFPRI December 3, 2015

The cost of action of &

inaction against land degradation

Page 2: The Cost of Action and of Inaction Against Land Degradation

What is land degradation?

According to Millennium Ecosystem Assessment (2005), land degradation is a long-term Loss of ecosystem services• Definition significantly differs

from past focus on loss of provisioning Services

• Reflects the United Nations sustainable Development Goals (SDG)

• Complicates rigorous analysis

Page 3: The Cost of Action and of Inaction Against Land Degradation

What does this study contribute to literature and current debate on Sustainable Development?

• New data on global land degradation• NDVI – correct GLADA data for carbon fertilization (CF) &

rainfall variability (RV) to isolate anthropogenic LD• Conducted groundtruthing of satellite data in six countries -

strong agreement between community & satellite for LD• Using total economic value (TEV), compute cost of land

degradation & benefit of sustainable land management (SLM):

• Use Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) land use change data to compute the change in value of ecosystem services

• Use crop and livestock simulation models to compute the cost of LD on crop and grazing lands

• Develop statistical model for computing grazing land biomass productivity using NDVI

Page 4: The Cost of Action and of Inaction Against Land Degradation

Global extent of land degradation & improvement:With & without correction for carbonFertilization (CF) & rainfall variability (RV)

Page 5: The Cost of Action and of Inaction Against Land Degradation

Extent of anthropogenic land degradation & improvement: corrected for FC & RV

Source: Bao et al 2014

Unlike Bai et al (2008), land degradationIs seen in poor and rich countries & in tropical & temperate regions

Page 6: The Cost of Action and of Inaction Against Land Degradation

Land degradation: no correction for CF & RVLoss of Net Primary Production between 1981-2003 – Bai et al 2008Cartography: Valerie Graw; Data Source: FAO GeoNetwork

Page 7: The Cost of Action and of Inaction Against Land Degradation

Why LD in North America, Australia & East Europe? Forest fire & logging increasing

Forest fire hotspots

Source: http://orbiterchspacenews.blogspot.de/2012/03/happy-birthday-envisat.html

Page 8: The Cost of Action and of Inaction Against Land Degradation

Global cost of land degradation

Page 9: The Cost of Action and of Inaction Against Land Degradation

Global cost of land degradation – regional distribution

Total cost due to LUCC & use of land degrading management practices ≈ US$300 billion

Page 10: The Cost of Action and of Inaction Against Land Degradation

Regional distribution of ecosystem services stock value and cost of land degradation due to LUCC

Page 11: The Cost of Action and of Inaction Against Land Degradation

Who bears the heaviest burden of the cost of land degradation due to LUCC? The world!!

Page 12: The Cost of Action and of Inaction Against Land Degradation

What is the cost of action & inaction against Land Degradation?

RegionCost of Action

Cost of Inaction

Cost of action as % of cost of inaction

MRRa of action against LD

30-year planning horizon, 2007 US$ billion

SSA 686 3226 21 5

LAC 825 3289 25 4

NAM 792 5147 15 6

East Asia 681 2910 23 4

Oceania 429 2899 15 7

South Asia 263 636 41 2

SE Asia 165 431 38 3

East Europe 815 5359 15 7

West Europe 221 102122

5

Central Asia 53 350 15 7

NENA 77 672 12 9

Total 5007 25939 19 5

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Page 13: The Cost of Action and of Inaction Against Land Degradation

• SSA accounts for the most significant loss & Europe experiences the least cost

• Hotspots of high costs of land degradation in both low and high income countries

• Land user direct impact on land degradation is only 46%. Incidence of loss lies heavily on the global community and on off-site communities

• Therefore:• Land degradation is everyone’s problem

• All cause LD• All are affected by LD• All benefit from restoration of degraded lands• So all should take action against LD

Page 14: The Cost of Action and of Inaction Against Land Degradation

Taking action against land degradation

• The cost of taking action is only 20% of the cost of inaction. This means, the returns to taking action are quite high

• Sustainable development goals & increasing land value are among major opportunities for taking action against LD

• It is time to take action against land degradation – just as YacoubaSawadogo did!!

Page 15: The Cost of Action and of Inaction Against Land Degradation

Acknowledgement

• BMZ/GIZ provided funding for this study• Many sources provided data and support for the study.


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