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Land health surveillance & Agroforestry in support of land restoration in Africa Ermias Betemariam Keith Shepherd Dennis Garrity.

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Presentation on theme: "Land health surveillance & Agroforestry in support of land restoration in Africa Ermias Betemariam Keith Shepherd Dennis Garrity."— Presentation transcript:

1 Land health surveillance & Agroforestry in support of land restoration in Africa Ermias Betemariam (e.betemariam@cgiar.org) Keith Shepherd Dennis Garrity UNCCD COP 12, Ankara 20 Oct. 2015

2 Land Health Surveillance Shepherd KD, et al. 2015. Land health surveillance and response: a framework for evidence-informed land management. Agricultural Systems 132: 93–106 Land Health - the capacity of land, relative to its potential, to sustain delivery of essential ecosystem services (the benefits people obtain from ecosystems) Land health surveillance Develop and promote methods for measuring and monitoring land health, assessing land health risks, and targeting interventions to improve agro-ecosystem health and human wellbeing

3 Context-Harnessing New Opportunities 2 WLE Flagship Project 1 (2017 – 2022): Restoring Degraded Landscapes (RDL): restore 7 million ha land in Africa, Asia and LAC 20–25% of global land degraded affecting 1.5 billion people Sustainable Development Goal # 15: Protect, restore and promote sustainable use of terrestrial ecosystems, sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, and halt and reverse land degradation and halt biodiversity loss The Bonn challenge: restore 150 million ha (85 billion a year) of deforested and degraded lands by 2020 and 350 million hectares by 2030 Zero Net Land Degradation (ZNLD) UNCCD by 2030: degradation < restoration= f(halting further loss, restoring already-degraded lands) CGIAR strategy 2016-2030 “Harnessing New Opportunities”: Improved National Resource Systems & Ecosystem Services (SLO 3): targets to restore 190 million hectares of degraded land by 2030 CRP

4 Opportunities Current global and national commitments to achieve all SDGs and to meet the Bonn Challenge Rewarding schemes of ecosystem services, REDD+ Climate smart agriculture, CC adaptation and mitigation, and green economy Advances in monitoring technologies such as remote sensing 3

5 4 In Africa, mostly the opportunity is in restoring mosaic landscapes with multiple functions Africa 50% of 59 M committed ~ 1.5 billion ha suitable for mosaic restoration, in which forests and trees, including agroforestry, smallholder agriculture, and settlements

6 5 At what stages? Under what contexts? Land degradation and restoration as a continuum

7 How can drivers of degradation can be reversed, What function is to be restored for whom (objectives), Who has rights, obligations (responsibilities) and stakes? (including restoration after planned destruction in the case of mining contracts), What means are appropriate (do nothing, support natural processes, or plant and manage), What incentives and investment is needed and how can this be sourced, How all of the above can be managed in a multi-stake-holder process, supported by monitoring and evaluation 6 Key questions in land restoration

8 Risk framework 7

9 8 Soil spectroscopy Rapid (~ 1000 samples/ day- robotic) Low cost (~ 56 %) Reproducible Predicts several soil functional properties Cost-effective monitoring of land/soil degradation and restoration Lowering cost of acquisition and access Satellites, UAVs, lab spectroscopy Improving relevance to improving critical decisions Decision analytics, Value of Information

10 9 Baseline information for targeting land restoration Africa Soil Information Services ++ Prediction map for soil organic carbon for sub-Saharan Africa. (Source: Africa Soil Information Service)

11 10 Information for targeting land restoration

12 11 - Cost - effective monitoring Increase in vegetation cover could be a sing of land degradation – e.g. bush encroachment in rangelands National capacity development is important

13 Land restoration to target multiple benefits- synergy 12 Healthy landscapes CBDUNFCCC UNCC D UNFCCC CBD Measurement could be expensive – Measure/monitor for multiple benefit LDN: Monitoring framework Land cover and land cover changes Land productivity dynamics Soil Organic Carbon content Biodiversity?? Socio-economic indicators??

14 Northern Ethiopia 13 Context specific solutions

15 There is insufficient specific evidence on land degradation to focus action. Land health problems share many features with public health problems. National land health surveillance systems could generate large development benefit. Preventive strategies that reduce distal risks at national levels are needed Ermias Betemariam | Hands-on soil infrared spectroscopy training course | Nairobi | Nov. 12, 2013 | 14 Final remarks

16 Avoid further degradation and restoring degraded lands Sustainable land management Avoiding degradation of non-degraded Lands – enhancing the productivity of cropland and pastoral land per unit area, time and input rather than expanding the area of land in production Community-based and traditional approaches Payment for ecosystem services Ermias Betemariam | Hands-on soil infrared spectroscopy training course | Nairobi | Nov. 12, 2013 | 15 Pathways

17 ActorsActivities Farmers and pastoralists Engage in capacity development Involve in preparedness and risk management schemes Private sector Engage in investments that increase efficiency in land use Invest in R&D on SLM Governments Create enabling environment- policy Set up national goal and targets Measure and monitor LDD Measuring LDD Intergovernm ental actions Agree on a Sustainable Development Agree on a new legal instrument (e.g. ZNLD) to the UNCCD Establish an Intergovernmental Panel/Platform 16 Recommendations


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