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Annex III: Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC)

While well known for rainforests, Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) are actually about one-fourth desert and drylands (20,533,000 km2). The deserts of the Pacific coast stretch from southern Ecuador across the entire Peruvian shoreline to northern Chile. Further inland, at altitudes of 3,000-4,500 meters, the high plains, or Altiplano, of the Andean mountains cover large areas of Peru, Bolivia, Chile, and Argentina. To the east of the Andes, an arid region extends from Chaco‘s northern reaches in Paraguay to Patagonia in southern Argentina. In northeastern Brazil, the landscape is dominated by semi-arid zones and tropical savannahs.

Desertification and degradation of natural resources seriously affect nearly all countries of the LAC region. The region’s rural areas are home to 125 million people, including 60 percent of the poorest people in the region. These regions are particularly affected by land degradation, which is a factor in the vicious circle of land overexploitation, degradation, increased demands on production, greater poverty, food insecurity and migration.

The LAC region faces many challenges caused by land degradation. Severe droughts and land degradation have made the countries in Central America extremely vulnerable to natural disasters, delaying their sustainable development. Large parts of Colombia and Venezuela are highly degraded. In the arid zones of the Dominican Republic, Cuba, Haiti and Jamaica, erosion and water shortages are noticeably intensifying. Most of Mexico is arid and semi-arid, mainly in the north.

Poverty and pressure on natural resources are critical factors driving land degradation in much of Latin America and the Caribbean. In a region with 465 million inhabitants, around 110 million live below the poverty line. Land degradation threatens the subsistence of a large part of the population living in rural areas – making it more difficult for people to earn a living wage. These conditions often force inhabitants in degraded areas to migrate.

Latin America and the Caribbean: Regional cooperation

The Regional Annex for Latin America and the Caribbean strongly emphasizes the need for sustainable development. The Convention has strong political support in the region. Every country is a party to the Convention, and the issues of land degradation, desertification and drought are constantly integrated into the national agendas for sustainable development and poverty reduction.

National Action Programmes (NAPs) have been formulated by most countries, taking a bottom-up approach with involvement from all relevant stakeholders, including civil society organizations.

LAC countries have defined national voluntary land degradation neutrality (LDN) targets and the elements needed to implement this methodology at national level, as part of the process to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), in particular the SDG goal 15.3. Currently there are 22 LAC countries participating in the LDN Target Setting Programme (LDN TSP). Three of these - Costa Rica, Chile and Grenada – have been selected as pilot countries.

A regional coordination unit (RCU) is hosted by the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) in Santiago de Chile.

Contact Regional Liaison Office for Latin America and the Caribbean (Annex III)

Mr. Jose Miguel Torrico

Programme Officer
Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC)
T: 0 562 2210 2017

Skype: jose.miguel.torrico

Offices N-27 and N-40, Northern Building, Division of CELADE
Dag Hammarskjöld 3477
Postal Code: 7630412
Vitacura, Santiago de Chile
CHILE

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Dominican Republic: restoring land to secure clean water for millions
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Brazil: lessons in resilience from the world’s most populated dryland
Brasil adere à Aliança Internacional para a Resiliência à Seca

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NOTAS PARA EDITORES Para entrevistas e perguntas, entrar em contato através do e-mail: press@unccd.int   Para obter informações sobre a IDRA, acesse: https://idralliance.global.  Nas redes sociais, siga @UNCCD no X/Twitter e @unccd no Instagram.  Sobre a IDRA A Aliança Internacional para Resiliência à Seca (IDRA, na sigla em inglês) é a primeira coalizão global que cria um impulso político e mobiliza recursos financeiros e técnicos para um futuro resiliente à seca. Como uma plataforma de mais de 30 países e 20 instituições, a IDRA se baseia em pontos fortes compartilhados por seus membros para promover políticas, ações e capacitação para a preparação para a seca, reconhecendo que somos tão resilientes à seca e à mudança climática quanto nossas terras.  O trabalho da IDRA está alinhado e apoia o mandato da Convenção das Nações Unidas de Combate à Desertificação (UNCCD), que sedia o Secretariado da IDRA.  Sobre a UNCCD A Convenção das Nações Unidas de Combate à Desertificação (UNCCD) é a visão global e a voz da terra. Une governos, cientistas, formuladores de políticas, setor privado e comunidades em torno de uma visão compartilhada e de uma ação global para restaurar e gerenciar a terra do mundo para a sustentabilidade da humanidade e do planeta.  Muito mais do que um tratado internacional assinado por 197 partes, a UNCCD é um compromisso multilateral para mitigar os impactos atuais da degradação da terra e promover a governança da terra no futuro, a fim de fornecer alimentos, água, abrigo e oportunidades econômicas para todas as pessoas de forma equitativa e inclusiva.

Brasil adere à Aliança Internacional para a Resiliência à Seca