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SG/SM/13061-ENV/DEV/1151-OBV/904

Secretary-General Calls for Intensified Global Efforts ‘to Nurture the Land We Need’ to Reach Development Goals, Ensure Human Well-Being, in Message to Brazil Meeting

16 August 2010
Secretary-GeneralSG/SM/13061
ENV/DEV/1151
OBV/904
Department of Public Information • News and Media Division • New York

Secretary-General Calls for Intensified Global Efforts ‘to Nurture the Land We Need’


to Reach Development Goals, Ensure Human Well-Being, in Message to Brazil Meeting

 


Following is UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s message to the Second International Conference on Climate, Sustainability and Development in Semi-arid Regions on the launch of the United Nations Decade for Deserts and the Fight against Desertification, held in Fortaleza, Brazil, 16 August:


It gives me great pleasure to send greetings to the Second International Conference on Climate, Sustainability and Development in Semi-arid Regions.


More than 2 billion people live in the world’s drylands.  The vast majority live on less than one dollar a day and without adequate access to freshwater.  Almost three quarters of rangelands show various symptoms of desertification.  Continued land degradation — whether from climate change, unsustainable agriculture or poor management of water resources — is a threat to food security, leading to starvation among the most acutely affected communities and robbing the world of productive land.


Land degradation also poses growing social costs.  Increased competition for depleted dryland resources can generate localized conflict and broader tensions.  The forced migration of millions of people creates the risk of social breakdown in the traditional lands they leave behind and instability in the increasingly crowded urban areas to which they go in search of jobs, shelter and services.


These are formidable challenges.  But they are not intractable.  Across the globe, efforts to rehabilitate drylands are showing results.  By providing sustained assistance to local communities, we can preserve or recover millions of hectares of land, reduce vulnerability to climate change and alleviate hunger and poverty for one third of humanity.


Desertification and land degradation are global problems that require a global response.  As we begin the Decade for Deserts and the Fight against Desertification, let us pledge to intensify our efforts to nurture the land we need for achieving the Millennium Development Goals and guaranteeing human well-being.  Please accept my best wishes for a successful conference.


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For information media • not an official record
For information media. Not an official record.