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U.N. Food And Agriculture Organization Warns 25 Percent Of Land Highly Degraded

By NICOLE WINFIELD   11/28/11 08:06 AM ET   AP

ROME -- The United Nations has completed the first-ever global assessment of the state of the planet's land resources, finding in a report Monday that a quarter of all land is highly degraded and warning the trend must be reversed if the world's growing population is to be fed.

The U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization estimates that farmers will have to produce 70 percent more food by 2050 to meet the needs of the world's expected 9 billion-strong population. That amounts to 1 billion tons more wheat, rice and other cereals and 200 million more tons of beef and other livestock.

But as it is, most available land is already being farmed, and in ways that often decrease its productivity through practices that lead to soil erosion and wasting of water.

That means that to meet the world's future food needs, a major "sustainable intensification" of agricultural productivity on existing farmland will be necessary, the FAO said in "State of the World's Land and Water Resources for Food and Agriculture."

FAO's director-general Jacques Diouf said increased competition over land for growing biofuels, coupled with climate change and poor farming practices, had left key food-producing systems at risk of being unable to meet human needs in 2050.

"The consequences in terms of hunger and poverty are unacceptable," he told reporters at FAO's Rome headquarters. "Remedial actions need to be taken now. We simply cannot continue on a course of business as usual."

The report was released Monday, as delegates from around the world meet in Durban, South Africa, for a two-week U.N. climate change conference aimed at breaking the deadlock on how to curb emissions of carbon dioxide and other pollutants.

The report found that climate change coupled with poor farming practices had contributed to a decrease in productivity of the world's farmland following the boon years of the Green Revolution, when crop yields soared thanks to new technologies, pesticides and the introduction of high-yield crops.

Thanks to the Green Revolution, the world's cropland grew by just 12 percent between 1961 and 2009, but food productivity increased by 150 percent.

But the U.N. report found that rates of growth have been slowing down in many areas and today are only half of what they were at the peak of the Green Revolution.

It found that 25 percent of the world's land is now "highly degraded," with soil erosion, water degradation and biodiversity loss. Another 8 percent is moderately degraded, while 36 percent is stable or slightly degraded and 10 percent is ranked as "improving."

The rest of the Earth's surface is either bare or covered by inland water bodies.

Some examples of areas at risk: Western Europe, where highly intensive agriculture has led to pollution of soil and aquifers and a resulting loss of biodiversity; In the highlands of the Himalayas, the Andes, the Ethiopian plateau and southern Africa, soil erosion has been coupled with an increased intensity of floods; In southeast and eastern Asia's rice-based food systems, land has been abandoned thanks in part to a loss of the cultural value of it.

The report found that water around the world is becoming ever more scarce and salinated, while groundwater is becoming more polluted by agricultural runoff and other toxins.

In order to meet the world's water needs in 2050, more efficient irrigation will be necessary since currently most irrigation systems perform well below their capacity, FAO said.

The agency called for new farming practices like integrated irrigation and fish-farm systems to meet those demands, as well as overall investment in agricultural development.

The price tag deemed necessary for investments through 2050: $1 trillion in irrigation water management alone for developing countries, with another $160 billion for soil conservation and flood control.

___

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ROME -- The United Nations has completed the first-ever global assessment of the state of the planet's land resources, finding in a report Monday that a quarter of all land is highly degraded and warn...
ROME -- The United Nations has completed the first-ever global assessment of the state of the planet's land resources, finding in a report Monday that a quarter of all land is highly degraded and warn...
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05:47 PM on 01/01/2012
Read "U.N. a cosa NOstra" out on Amazon.com to find out more about FAO and mr. Diouf
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StephenBP
What's he building in there?
08:30 PM on 11/29/2011
Let's pile in our jeeps and hummers and dirt bikes and ATV's and 4xD's and go tear us up some landscape! Yessiree Bob! That is what I call good clean fun.

Heck, there is just too much vegetation on God's green earth and not enough soil erosion or topsoil runoff!

Wheeeee! Wheeee! Wheeee! all the way home!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lovemycivicduty
07:51 PM on 11/29/2011
We need to intensify the trend of gardening and try to get more local gardens feeding communities.
01:21 PM on 11/29/2011
Sounds like the problem is too many people.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lovemycivicduty
07:52 PM on 11/29/2011
too many people wasting a lot of money consuming junk when they should be producing food in their backyards (if you have one, of course). the problem isn't people, it's ignorance...from people.
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10:47 PM on 11/29/2011
Humans are using 40% of the world's annual biomass production. In a few years that will be 50%, then 60%, and so forth. If the human population reaches 15 billion it can only be by wiping out every other species of animal on the face of the earth and devoting 100% of all plant production to feeding people.

Then comes "Soylent Green" time. The problem IS too many people.
10:14 PM on 12/09/2011
I do my part, spray nothing but organic matter, feed my cats organic meat, yet next door, the stupid neighbor insists on the cancer causing super bug producing bio hazards! My cats come inside here with the smell of toxins and they often vomit. I am thinking of suing the bug company. Alternatives to the poison is available, lets use it! Citrus is now in world wide use for insect control and works better than the old standard garbage.
08:49 AM on 11/29/2011
I'm sure congress can dish out plenty of fertilizer to solve this problem. It has given us plenty. LOL
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mac2jr
The truth always wins out
08:44 AM on 11/29/2011
The comment count of 311 at 8:42 AM 11/29/2011 TELLS it ALL.

People are not interested in their future, now go to the comments on Barney Frank's no running for office and you are lucky your comment even makes it on the board among the tens of thousands of idiot responses being posted.

I would ask God to help us, but SHE gave up long ago.
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10:50 PM on 11/29/2011
I favor the Mesopotamian Creation Story: After the Gods created the world, all the Gods had a party and got drunk. Then the drunken Gods created humans. The more I see of the human race the more the idea appeals to me.
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Mark Twainer
Death of Dogma
06:16 AM on 11/29/2011
Monsanto to the rescue.
11:39 PM on 11/28/2011
What if individuals just took more responsibility for feeding themselves? Creating and maintaining organic home vegetables gardens instead of relinquishing control of our natural resources, diet (health) and ecosystems (well-being) to soulless, profit-chasing corporations?
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JWerner
Beware Macduff; beware the thane of Fife!
05:41 AM on 11/29/2011
That requires more room than you'd think (I speak from personal experience). Not to mention labor and maintenance, which many people may not be interested in. It's an option, but not one that's likely to catch on nationally.
11:09 PM on 11/28/2011
It appears we have been blind for the past 50 years or so. Why did not the warning come when about 5% of deterioration in land and water resources was noticed? Population is on the increase and so is demand for food production. Whilst poverty is a way of life in many developing countries and people consume little, the west is overconsuming beyond measure and expect developing countries to be the suppliers of their greed. How do we reconciliate that?
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mac2jr
The truth always wins out
08:32 PM on 11/28/2011
We need solar and wind energy to be used for our long-distance travel via High-Speed rail systems, and for powering our homes and businesses.

Also, this free non-polluting energy can be used to pump ocean water to desalting plants and to irritably lands that can be used to grow food, i.e. deserts and grassy plains.

Our friends to the South in Mexico has areas that have enough sunlight to power all of Mexico and most of the USA; and they too need water for their farms, which can be pumped in from the seas.

Native America is already working on this, and we should be helping our native people instead of allowing our Corporate Greednicks freedom to 'Rip off' these people at every turn.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
silverwolf13
I know that I do not know.
11:44 PM on 11/28/2011
Right on! F&F!
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mac2jr
The truth always wins out
08:24 PM on 11/28/2011
Burning of fossil fuels like coal and oil produces mercury and other pollutants that produce acid rain that changes the PH of our water supplies that when used to irrigate our lands, concentrate and destroy all things that grow.

Burning of fossil fuels produces CO2 which rises into the atmosphere and forms a blanket that keeps the heat in and causes massive changes in weather, some of which turn deserts into lakes and good productive land into deserts. Farmers in many countries are losing their farms due to this.

Using fossil fuels for the base material for pesticides and fertilizers cause damage to water supplies, bays, and oceans and this depletes our fish and seafood, which billions of people depend on for protein and life giving foodstuffs.
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JWerner
Beware Macduff; beware the thane of Fife!
05:43 AM on 11/29/2011
The CO2 in the atmosphere also eventually interacts with ocean water, raising the acidity of the oceans. . .thus endangering life in the oceans.
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07:38 PM on 11/28/2011
I think it'd be better to stop this kind of awareness, it sort of... drags this all out, this bio destructiveness. I truly believe we will only learn, as a whole species, when things are at their worse, then there /is/ no going back, when we're so screwed 90% of us have to die in order for the rest to live.

Let's hurry up and have at Earth, just ruin it, for the sake of the future.
07:16 PM on 11/28/2011
'Denialism' Scientific findings rejected in an unscientific manner. Stop blaming the UN for accurate scientifc information.
07:40 PM on 11/28/2011
They're trying to mislead us with the truth. DON'T FALL FOR IT!
07:00 PM on 11/28/2011
Consider the source and their agenda, before you take this story, hook, line and sinker.
07:12 PM on 11/28/2011
I do that whenever a story is on Faux News.
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Katmandu01
09:05 AM on 11/29/2011
And just what is "their agenda"? Please share that with me and with all of us.
06:45 PM on 11/28/2011
this is just the beginning people! not so good days ahead, sorry to say
07:14 PM on 11/28/2011
I think we've known about this a long time so this isn't the beginning.