logo
Why healthy land is our greatest economic asset

Why healthy land is our greatest economic asset

Arab News20-06-2025
https://arab.news/nxb5w
The signs are becoming harder to ignore. Crops are failing more often. Wells are yielding less water. Dust settles where food once grew. In many parts of the world, the land is growing tired — less able to support the people who depend on it. And as the soil weakens, so too do the livelihoods, economies and communities built upon it.
While land degradation is a global concern, its impact is especially pronounced in the Arab region. Stretching from North Africa to the Arabian Peninsula, this part of the world is among the most vulnerable. Nearly 90 percent of land is already degraded and a combination of rising temperatures, water scarcity and stressed agricultural systems is placing an increasing strain on people and ecosystems alike.
Here, land degradation is not just about the environment — it affects the fundamentals of daily life. It shapes whether families can grow enough to eat, whether young people envision a future at home and whether communities can remain self-reliant. In some areas, it has already contributed to displacement and tension over dwindling natural resources.
While agriculture still employs 38 percent of the workforce across the Arab region, half of all calories consumed are imported. With droughts intensifying and arable land diminishing, pressure is mounting on food production and rural livelihoods across the region. Without meaningful investment in sustainable land use, the divide between those with access to fertile land and food and those without will only deepen.
Still, this is not just a problem to solve; it is a chance to rethink how we value and manage land. Not as something to be used up, but as a foundation to be protected and solidified.
We now know that land restoration delivers real returns. For every dollar invested, studies show a return of $7 to $30 in benefits. Globally, restoring 1 billion hectares of degraded land could generate up to $1.8 trillion in value annually. These are not distant ambitions — they are within reach.
Healthy land is not just an environmental priority, but a cornerstone of long-term resilience and prosperity.
Ibrahim Thiaw
Yet the financing gap remains stark. To meet global restoration targets by 2030, investments to the tune of $1 billion dollars per day are needed. The private sector currently contributes 6 percent of total investment. Scaling up both public and private finance and redirecting harmful subsidies toward sustainable land use will be necessary to keep our economic models sustainable.
Encouragingly, the Arab region is taking meaningful steps. The Arab Coordination Group has pledged $10 billion by 2030 to address land degradation and strengthen drought resilience. It is a significant move, but far more is needed. Globally, $7 trillion continues to support land-harmful subsidies and unsustainable practices, underlining the urgency of shifting resources toward land restoration.
To shift direction, we need smarter tools for investment. One of these is the Sustainable Return on Investment — a way of measuring success that includes not only financial returns, but also climate stability, biodiversity, food security and human well-being. This approach can guide both public and private capital toward lasting impact.
As we marked World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought on June 17, our message was clear: Healthy land is not just an environmental priority, but a cornerstone of long-term resilience and prosperity.
Because when we restore land, we restore choices. We restore hope and dignity. And we rebuild the foundation of a more secure, equitable, and livable world for all.
• Ibrahim Thiaw is under-secretary-general of the UN and executive secretary of the UN Convention to Combat Desertification.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

KSrelief delivers aid in Asia, Africa
KSrelief delivers aid in Asia, Africa

Arab News

time2 days ago

  • Arab News

KSrelief delivers aid in Asia, Africa

RIYADH: The Saudi aid agency KSrelief is continuing its efforts to help the underprivileged around the world. The agency this week distributed 1,525 food baskets to displaced families in Gezira State, Sudan. A total of 7,850 individuals benefited from this assistance, as part of the third phase of the 2025 Food Security Support Project in Sudan. Some 3,900 food baskets were distributed to vulnerable, flood-affected communities in several districts across Pakistan, helping 27,094 individuals. A total of 206 food baskets were delivered in Nangarhar Province, Afghanistan. The aid benefited 1,236 Afghan returnees from Pakistan, as part of the 2025-2026 Food Security and Emergency Project in Afghanistan. The aid comes within the framework of the relief and humanitarian projects provided by Saudi Arabia through KSrelief, which aims to alleviate the suffering of people in need worldwide.

KSrelief delivers food aid in Somalia's Middle Shabelle region
KSrelief delivers food aid in Somalia's Middle Shabelle region

Arab News

time4 days ago

  • Arab News

KSrelief delivers food aid in Somalia's Middle Shabelle region

MOGADISHU: Saudi aid agency KSrelief distributed 1,000 food baskets to vulnerable families in Somalia's Middle Shabelle region, benefiting 6,600 people. The initiative is part of a food security support project under the framework of the Kingdom's global humanitarian and relief efforts. The agency also recently distributed 349 shelter kits and 297 personal care kits in the towns of Al-Musayfirah, Saida, Khirbet Ghazal, Jabab and Al-Sahwah in Syria's Daraa governorate, reaching 646 displaced families. The scheme was part of Saudi Arabia's projects to alleviate Syrian suffering.

How conflicts across the Middle East and North Africa are brutalizing a generation
How conflicts across the Middle East and North Africa are brutalizing a generation

Arab News

time10-08-2025

  • Arab News

How conflicts across the Middle East and North Africa are brutalizing a generation

LONDON: For the past two years, humanitarian aid groups and UN aid agencies have warned repeatedly about the increasingly terrible price being paid by children in the conflicts across the Middle East and North Africa. It is a refrain which, against the backdrop of the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza, has all but faded into the general cacophony of horror that in 2025 has become the soundtrack to life for so many in the region. So when Edouard Beigbeder, MENA region director at UNICEF, the UN children's fund, announced that more than 12 million children had been maimed, killed, or displaced by conflict in the region over the past two years, this gargantuan figure caused barely a ripple. 'A child's life is being turned upside down the equivalent of every five seconds due to the conflicts in the region,' Beigbeder said. 'Half of the region's 220 million children live in conflict-affected countries. We cannot allow this number to rise. Ending hostilities — for the sake of children — is not optional; it is an urgent necessity, a moral obligation, and it is the only path to a better future.' UNICEF estimates that 45 million children across the region will require humanitarian assistance this year 'due to continued life-threatening risks and vulnerabilities' — up from 32 million in 2020, a 41 percent increase in just five years. The analysis is based on reported figures for children killed, injured, or displaced in Iran, Israel, Lebanon, Palestine, Sudan, Syria, and Yemen since September 2023, combined with demographic data from the UN Population Division. But only those who have seen firsthand the suffering of children can fully understand the true meaning of such statistics. UNICEF staff on the ground in Gaza and elsewhere in the region are among those who have witnessed the true meaning of children's suffering up close. One of them is Salim Oweis, a communications specialist with UNICEF's MENA office. Based in Jordan, his job is to go where, thanks to Israeli restrictions, international journalists cannot go, to tell stories from the scene. It is a job which, he freely admits, gives him nightmares. Oweis was in Gaza in August last year during one of the peaks in violence, when UNICEF was trying to reunite children separated from their families. And during the temporary ceasefire in February this year, when UNICEF worked with the World Health Organization to administer polio vaccines to hundreds of thousands of children. When he first joined UNICEF, nine years ago, it was at the height of the civil war in Syria. 'I wasn't in the field yet, but I was receiving all these disturbing stories and images,' said Oweis. 'I used to have nightly nightmares about me running away with my nephews, who were babies at the time.' His job is harrowing, he says, but 'how could I be sleeping safely at home, knowing this is happening, without doing anything?' Oweis even describes as 'selfish' the 'reward' he gets from telling stories that might otherwise remain untold. 'I've been there, I've spoken to people, I've been able to hug a child, or smile with a child, or listen to a mother,' he said. 'Maybe I can't directly help her in the moment, but our job is to deliver the story, especially in places like Gaza, where no international media is allowed, and I think that is crucially important, in terms of letting people know what's happening with children, and for their voices not to go unheard. 'Yes, I have my daily reminders of being exposed to that. But I think the cause is bigger than me, I believe in it — and I want to be on the right side of history.' The message Oweis wants the world to hear, loud and clear, is that, whether in Gaza or Sudan, children are facing 'a total disruption of whatever you think normal daily life for a child should be. 'Everything is disrupted. There is no sense of safety, no sense, even, of belonging, no sense of connection with others, no sense of community, because they are being constantly ripped away from places and communities to which they belong are under constant threat of death or displacement.' • 12 million Children maimed, killed, or displaced by MENA conflicts in the past two years. • 1/2 Proportion of the region's 220m children who live in conflict-affected countries. • 45 million Children across the region who will require humanitarian assistance this year. (Source: UNICEF) Oweis says when he was in Gaza, 'I didn't meet any child, or adult, for that matter, who hadn't lost someone, and mostly it's either a father, a mother, a sister or a brother.' For Oweis, meeting children in Gaza who had lost a father was hard, but looking into the eyes of children who had lost siblings was equally distressing. 'For a child to lose a brother or a sister, who they play marbles with, climb with, even fight with. When all that suddenly goes. 'We like to say that children have a high tolerance, but I think that is a dangerous word to use, because we say it and then we expect them to be resilient, but not every child is equally resilient.' In Gaza, UNICEF has been doing its best to offer as much psycho-social support as possible to a generation of children in danger of being brutalized by war. 'The UN has been very clear that there are no such thing as 'safe zones' in Gaza,' said Oweis. 'But we create child-friendly spaces where children can go for a couple of hours a day.' Part of the objective is to maintain a basic level of education in four main subjects — maths, science, English and Arabic — 'but school is not only for learning,' added Oweis. 'It's also for bonding, for community, for emotional and social connection.' Through games, singing, and other activities, children are encouraged to be children, if only for a couple of hours a day, and to express themselves. Oweis visited one camp for displaced people in Gaza where UNICEF had partners delivering activities, one of which was a session in creative writing. Asked to write about their least favorite color, many of the children, who had seen more bloodshed than any child should ever see, unhesitatingly nominated red, followed by grey, the color of the rubble of devastated buildings. Each child, Oweis found, is affected differently by the trauma they have experienced. 'Some of them are very withdrawn. They don't speak to you, they don't respond to you. They don't even look you in the eye. They seem broken by what they've been through. 'Others are more active and engaging. There is no one mold that fits all, but you know that every one of them is affected in some way.' Affected, and affecting. Oweis will never forget one young boy he met, who had lost a leg. 'He was in a wheelchair, and he was the sweetest person, very smiley. We asked him what he wanted for the future, and he said, 'I want to go back and play football.' 'Me and my colleague and the boy's father were there and all of us were taken aback, because we knew he was never going to do that in the way he thinks he will.' Oweis fears that the conflicts in Gaza and elsewhere are breeding a generation of lost souls. 'I truly hope not,' he said. 'Before all this we had an initiative with a lot of global partners in Syria called No Lost Generation. But unfortunately, each day that war continues, and hostilities impact children — not only in Gaza, but also in Sudan, in Syria, and now in Yemen, which is unfortunately almost forgotten — the risk of losing that generation, those childhoods, grows. 'I don't want to believe that, because I really believe that we can still do something. But unfortunately, we know that many of the children that we will be able to provide with psychological support will not benefit from it. For them it will be too late, because the trauma is not a one-off, but is a daily thing for months on end. 'So yes, each day we are risking many more children being lost, and we're talking about not only the impact on their lives, but also on the community, because they're not going to be productive, they're going to be needing a lot of support, medical, social and psychological, and that will have impact on the very core of these communities.' There is also the fear that the brutality unleashed in Gaza will simply perpetuate the seemingly never-ending violence by breeding a new generation of terrorists. 'The best way for a government to fight terrorist movements is to avoid killing civilians, otherwise the cycle of victimization just breeds more terrorists,' said Jessica Stern, a research professor at Boston University's Pardee School of Global Studies, whose work focuses on connections between trauma and terror. In a co-authored article published in Foreign Affairs magazine two months after the Oct. 7, 2023, Hamas-led attack on southern Israel that triggered the war on Gaza, Stern wrote: 'Those who study trauma know that 'hurt people hurt people,' and the adage holds true for terrorists.' People who live in a state of existential anxiety, she argued, 'are prone to dehumanizing others. 'Hamas, for instance, calls Israelis 'infidels,' while the Israeli Defense Minister Yoav Gallant has referred to members of Hamas as 'human animals,' and both sides have called the other 'Nazis.' 'Such dehumanizing language makes it easier to overcome inhibitions against committing atrocities.' UNICEF's wake-up call about the suffering of children across the MENA region comes as the agency is experiencing major funding shortfalls. As of May, its programs in Syria were facing a 78 percent funding gap, while its 2025 appeal on behalf of the people of Palestine fared little better, with a 68 percent shortfall. Looking ahead, says UNICEF, 'the outlook remains bleak.' As things stand, the agency expects its funding in MENA to decline by up to a quarter by 2026 — a loss of up to $370 million — 'jeopardizing life-saving programs across the region, including treatment for severe malnutrition, safe water production in conflict zones, and vaccinations against deadly diseases.' As the plight of children in the region worsens, said UNICEF's regional director Beigbeder, 'the resources to respond are becoming sparser. 'Conflicts must stop. International advocacy to resolve these crises must intensify. And support for vulnerable children must increase, not decline.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store