Land degradation is the result of human-induced actions which exploit land, causing its utility, biodiversity, soil fertility, and overall health to decline.​

Land is being degraded rapidly worldwide. Ensuring food security for a growing global population requires healthy land resources and flourishing ecosystems. Yet our current agricultural practices are causing soils worldwide to be eroded up to 100 times faster than natural processes replenish them. ​

We have already altered 70 percent of all ice-free land, impacting over 3.2 billion people. At current rates, 90 percent of land will bear our imprint by 2050. The impacts of land degradation will be felt by most of the world’s population. ​Land degradation also changes and disrupts rainfall patterns, exacerbates extreme weather like droughts or floods, and drives further climate change.​ It results in social and political instability, which drives poverty, conflict, and migration. ​

The UNCCD’s goal of land degradation neutrality (LDN) can halt, and then reverse, this alarming picture of the future. ​We are already helping 131 of the world’s 196 countries that have pledged (or are aiming) to arrest land degradation by 2030. ​More than 100 countries participate in the Changwon Initiative, which supports national voluntary target setting processes to achieve land degradation neutrality (LDN). We define LDN as “a state whereby the amount and quality of land resources necessary to support ecosystem functions and services to enhance food security remain stable, or increase, within specified temporal and spatial scales and ecosystems.”​

Achieving LDN requires three concurrent actions: ​
  • firstly, avoiding new degradation of land by maintaining existing healthy land; ​
  • secondly, reducing existing degradation by adopting sustainable land management practices that can slow degradation while increasing biodiversity, soil health, and food production; and ​
  • thirdly, ramping up efforts to restore and return degraded lands to a natural or more productive state.​
The UNCCD’s objectives for LDN include:​
  • maintaining or improving the sustainable delivery of ecosystem services​
  • maintaining or improving land productivity to enhance global food security​
  • Increasing the resilience of land and the populations dependent on it​
  • seeking synergies with other social, economic, and environmental objectives​
  • reinforcing and promoting responsible and inclusive land governance​

32

gigatons of carbon ​will be lost from the land due to intensive agriculture between 2015-2030​ ​ ​

70%

of all ice-free land has already been altered by human activity impacting over 3.2 billion people​

Green leaf
Publications

The achievement of land degradation neutrality (LDN) can lead to multiple environmental, social and economic benefits, but only through the establishment of an enabling environment.

The report “Land Degradation Neutrality for Biodiversity Conservation: How Healthy Land Safeguards Nature” highlights how LDN can address the priorities of both the CBD and the UNCCD in an effective and complementary manner. According to the report, LDN and the CBD’s…

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