|
Agenda 21, Chapter 12, 13
August 1992
Distr.
GENERAL
A/CONF.151/26 (Vol. II),
13 August 1992
ORIGINAL: ENGLISH
REPORT OF THE UNITED NATIONS
CONFERENCE ON ENVIRONMENT AND DEVELOPMENT
(Rio de Janeiro, 3-14 June 1992)
Chapter 12
MANAGING FRAGILE ECOSYSTEMS: COMBATING DESERTIFICATION
AND DROUGHT
INTRODUCTION
12.1. Fragile ecosystems
are important ecosystems, with unique features and
resources. Fragile ecosystems include deserts, semi-arid
lands, mountains, wetlands, small islands and certain
coastal areas. Most of these ecosystems are regional
in scope, as they transcend national boundaries. This
chapter addresses land resource issues in deserts,
as well as arid, semi-arid and dry sub-humid areas.
Sustainable mountain development is addressed in chapter
13; small islands and coastal areas are discussed
in chapter 17.
12.2. Desertification
is land degradation in arid, semi-arid and dry sub-humid
areas resulting from various factors, including climatic
variations and human activities. Desertification affects
about one sixth of the world's population, 70 per
cent of all drylands, amounting to 3.6 billion hectares,
and one quarter of the total land area of the world.
The most obvious impact of desertification, in addition
to widespread poverty, is the degradation of 3.3 billion
hectares of the total area of rangeland, constituting
73 per cent of the rangeland with a low potential
for human and animal carrying capacity; decline in
soil fertility and soil structure on about 47 per
cent of the dryland areas constituting marginal rainfed
cropland; and the degradation of irrigated cropland,
amounting to 30 per cent of the dryland areas with
a high population density and agricultural potential.
12.3. The priority
in combating desertification should be the implementation
of preventive measures for lands that are not yet
degraded, or which are only slightly degraded. However,
the severely degraded areas should not be neglected.
In combating desertification and drought, the participation
of local communities, rural organisations, national
Governments, non-governmental organisations and international
and regional organisations is essential.
12.4.
The following programme areas are included in this
chapter:
(A.) Strengthening
the knowledge base and developing information and
monitoring systems for regions prone to desertification
and drought, including the economic and social aspects
of these ecosystems;
(B.) Combating
land degradation through, inter alia, intensified
soil conservation, afforestation and reforestation
activities;
(C.) Developing
and strengthening integrated development programmes
for the eradication of poverty and promotion of alternative
livelihood systems in areas prone to desertification;
(D.) Developing
comprehensive anti-desertification programmes and
integrating them into national development plans and
national environmental planning;
(E.) Developing
comprehensive drought preparedness and drought-relief
schemes, including self-help arrangements, for drought-prone
areas and designing programmes to cope with environmental
refugees;
(F.) Encouraging
and promoting popular participation and environmental
education, focusing on desertification control and
management of the effects of drought.
PROGRAMME AREAS
(A.) Strengthening
the knowledge base and developing information and
monitoring systems for regions prone to desertification
and drought, including the economic and social aspects
of these ecosystems (back
to top)
Basis for action
12.5. The global
assessments of the status and rate of desertification
conducted by the United Nations Environment Programme
(UNEP) in 1977, 1984 and 1991 have revealed insufficient
basic knowledge of desertification processes. Adequate
world-wide systematic observation systems are helpful
for the development and implementation of effective
anti-desertification programmes. The capacity of existing
international, regional and national institutions,
particularly in developing countries, to generate
and exchange relevant information is limited. An integrated
and coordinated information and systematic observation
system based on appropriate technology and embracing
global, regional, national and local levels is essential
for understanding the dynamics of desertification
and drought processes. It is also important for developing
adequate measures to deal with desertification and
drought and improving socio-economic conditions.
Objectives
12.6. The objectives
of this programme area are:
(a) To promote the establishment and/or strengthening
of national environmental information coordination
centres that will act as focal points within Governments
for sectoral ministries and provide the necessary
standardisation and back-up services; to ensure also
that national environmental information systems on
desertification and drought are linked together through
a network at subregional, regional and interregional
levels;
(b) To strengthen regional and global systematic
observation networks linked to the development of
national systems for the observation of land degradation
and desertification caused both by climate fluctuations
and by human impact, and to identify priority areas
for action;
(c) To establish a permanent system at both national
and international levels for monitoring desertification
and land degradation with the aim of improving living
conditions in the affected areas.
Activities
(a) Management-related
activities
12.7. Governments
at the appropriate level, with the support of the
relevant international and regional organisations,
should:
a) Establish and/or strengthen environmental information
systems at the national level;
b) Strengthen national, state/provincial and local
assessment and ensure cooperation/networking between
existing environmental information and monitoring
systems, such as Earthwatch and the Sahara and Sahel
Observatory;
c) Strengthen the capacity of national institutions
to analyse environmental data so that ecological change
can be monitored and environmental information obtained
on a continuing basis at the national level.
(b) Data and information
12.8. Governments
at the appropriate level, with the support of the
relevant international and regional organisations,
should:
a) Review and study the means for measuring the ecological,
economic and social consequences of desertification
and land degradation and introduce the results of
these studies internationally into desertification
and land degradation assessment practices;
b) Review and study the interactions between the
socio-economic impacts of climate, drought and desertification
and utilise the results of these studies to secure
concrete action.
12.9. Governments
at the appropriate level, with the support of the
relevant international and regional organisations,
should:
a) Support the integrated data collection and research
work of programmes related to desertification and
drought problems;
b) Support national, regional and global programmes
for integrated data collection and research networks
carrying out assessment of soil and land degradation;
c) Strengthen national and regional meteorological
and hydrological networks and monitoring systems to
ensure adequate collection of basic information and
communication among national, regional and international
centres.
(c) International and regional
cooperation and coordination
12.10. Governments
at the appropriate level, with the support of the
relevant international and regional organisations,
should:
a) Strengthen regional programmes and international
cooperation, such as the Permanent Inter-State Committee
on Drought Control in the Sahel (CILSS), the Intergovernmental
Authority for Drought and Development (IGADD), the
Southern African Development Coordination Conference
(SADCC), the Arab Maghreb Union and other regional
organisations, as well as such organisations as the
Sahara and Sahel Observatory;
b) Establish and/or develop a comprehensive desertification,
land degradation and human condition database component
that incorporates both physical and socio-economic
parameters. This should be based on existing and,
where necessary, additional facilities, such as those
of Earthwatch and other information systems of international,
regional and national institutions strengthened for
this purpose;
c) Determine benchmarks and define indicators of
progress that facilitate the work of local and regional
organisations in tracking progress in the fight for
anti-desertification. Particular attention should
be paid to indicators of local participation.
Means of implementation
(a) Financing and cost
evaluation
12.11. The Conference
secretariat has estimated the average total annual
cost (1993-2000) of implementing the activities of
this programme to be about $350 million, including
about $175 million from the international community
on grant or concessional terms. These are indicative
and order-of-magnitude estimates only and have not
been reviewed by Governments. Actual costs and financial
terms, including any that are non-concessional, will
depend upon, inter alia, the specific strategies and
programmes Governments decide upon for implementation.
(b) Scientific and technological
means
12.12. Governments
at the appropriate level, with the support of the
relevant international and regional organisations
working on the issue of desertification and drought,
should:
a) Undertake and update existing inventories of natural
resources, such as energy, water, soil, minerals,
plant and animal access to food, as well as other
resources, such as housing, employment, health, education
and demographic distribution in time and space;
b) Develop integrated information systems for environmental
monitoring, accounting and impact assessment;
c) International bodies should cooperate with national
Governments to facilitate the acquisition and development
of appropriate technology for monitoring and combating
drought and desertification.
(c) Human resource development
12.13. Governments
at the appropriate level, with the support of the
relevant international and regional organisations
working on the issue of desertification and drought,
should develop the technical and professional skills
of people engaged in monitoring and assessing the
issue of desertification and drought.
(d) Capacity-building
12.14. Governments
at the appropriate level, with the support of the
relevant international and regional organisations
working on the issue of desertification and drought,
should:
a) Strengthen national and local institutions by
providing adequate staff equipment and finance for
assessing desertification;
b) Promote the involvement of the local population,
particularly women and youth, in the collection and
utilisation of environmental information through education
and awareness-building.
(B.) Combating
land degradation through, inter alia, intensified
soil conservation, afforestation and reforestation
activities (back
to top)
Basis for action
12.15. Desertification
affects about 3.6 billion hectares, which is about
70 per cent of the total area of the world's drylands
or nearly one quarter of the global land area. In
combating desertification on rangeland, rainfed cropland
and irrigated land, preventative measures should be
launched in areas which are not yet affected or are
only slightly affected by desertification; corrective
measures should be implemented to sustain the productivity
of moderately desertified land; and rehabilitative
measures should be taken to recover severely or very
severely desertified drylands.
12.16. An increasing
vegetation cover would promote and stabilise the hydrological
balance in the dryland areas and maintain land quality
and land productivity. Prevention of not yet degraded
land and application of corrective measures and rehabilitation
of moderate and severely degraded drylands, including
areas affected by sand dune movements, through the
introduction of environmentally sound, socially acceptable,
fair and economically feasible land-use systems. This
will enhance the land carrying capacity and maintenance
of biotic resources in fragile ecosystems.
Objectives
12.17. The objectives
of this programme area are:
a) As regards areas not yet affected or only slightly
affected by desertification, to ensure appropriate
management of existing natural formations (including
forests) for the conservation of biodiversity, watershed
protection, sustainability of their production and
agricultural development, and other purposes, with
the full participation of indigenous people;
b) To rehabilitate moderately to severely desertified
drylands for productive utilisation and sustain their
productivity for agropastoral/agroforestry development
through, inter alia, soil and water conservation;
c) To increase the vegetation cover and support management
of biotic resources in regions affected or prone to
desertification and drought, notably through such
activities as afforestation/reforestation, agroforestry,
community forestry and vegetation retention schemes;
d) To improve management of forest resources, including
woodfuel, and to reduce woodfuel consumption through
more efficient utilisation, conservation and the enhancement,
development and use of other sources of energy, including
alternative sources of energy.
Activities
(a) Management-related
activities
12.18. Governments
at the appropriate level, and with the support of
the relevant international and regional organisations,
should:
a) Implement urgent direct preventive measures in
drylands that are vulnerable but not yet affected,
or only slightly desertified drylands, by introducing
(i) improved land-use policies and practices for more
sustainable land productivity; (ii) appropriate, environmentally
sound and economically feasible agricultural and pastoral
technologies; and (iii) improved management of soil
and water resources;
b) Carry out accelerated afforestation and reforestation
programmes, using drought-resistant, fast-growing
species, in particular native ones, including legumes
and other species, combined with community-based agroforestry
schemes. In this regard, creation of large-scale reforestation
and afforestation schemes, particularly through the
establishment of green belts, should be considered,
bearing in mind the multiple benefits of such measures;
c) Implement urgent direct corrective measures in
moderately to severely desertified drylands, in addition
to the measures listed in paragraph 19 (a) above,
with a view to restoring and sustaining their productivity;
d) Promote improved land/water/crop-management systems,
making it possible to combat salinisation in existing
irrigated croplands; and to stabilise rainfed croplands
and introduce improved soil/crop-management systems
into land-use practice;
e) Promote participatory management of natural resources,
including rangeland, to meet both the needs of rural
populations and conservation purposes, based on innovative
or adapted indigenous technologies;
f) Promote in situ protection and conservation of
special ecological areas through legislation and other
means for the purpose of combating desertification
while ensuring the protection of biodiversity;
g) Promote and encourage investment in forestry development
in drylands through various incentives, including
legislative measures;
h) Promote the development and use of sources of
energy which will lessen pressure on ligneous resources,
including alternative sources of energy and improved
stoves.
(b) Data and information
12.19. Governments
at the appropriate level, with the support of the
relevant international and regional organisations,
should:
a) Develop land-use models based on local practices
for the improvement of such practices, with a focus
on preventing land degradation. The models should
give a better understanding of the variety of natural
and human-induced factors that may contribute to desertification.
Models should incorporate the interaction of both
new and traditional practices to prevent land degradation
and reflect the resilience of the whole ecological
and social system;
b) Develop, test and introduce, with due regard to
environmental security considerations, drought resistant,
fast-growing and productive plant species appropriate
to the environment of the regions concerned.
(c) International and regional
cooperation and coordination
12.20. The appropriate
United Nations agencies, international and regional
organisations, non-governmental organisations and
bilateral agencies should:
a) Coordinate their roles in combating land degradation
and promoting reforestation, agroforestry and land-management
systems in affected countries;
b) Support regional and subregional activities in
technology development and dissemination, training
and programme implementation to arrest dryland degradation.
12.21. The national
Governments concerned, the appropriate United Nations
agencies and bilateral agencies should strengthen
the coordinating role in dryland degradation of subregional
intergovernmental organisations set up to cover these
activities, such as CILSS, IGADD, SADCC and the Arab
Maghreb Union.
Means of implementation
(a) Financing and cost
evaluation
12.22. The Conference
secretariat has estimated the average total annual
cost (1993-2000) of implementing the activities of
this programme to be about $6 billion, including about
$3 billion from the international community on grant
or concessional terms. These are indicative and order-of-magnitude
estimates only and have not been reviewed by Governments.
Actual costs and financial terms, including any that
are non-concessional, will depend upon, inter alia,
the specific strategies and programmes Governments
decide upon for implementation.
(b) Scientific and technological
means
12.23. Governments
at the appropriate level and local communities, with
the support of the relevant international and regional
organisations, should:
a) Integrate indigenous knowledge related to forests,
forest lands, rangeland and natural vegetation into
research activities on desertification and drought;
b) Promote integrated research programmes on the
protection, restoration and conservation of water
and land resources and land-use management based on
traditional approaches, where feasible.
(c) Human resource development
12.24. Governments
at the appropriate level and local communities, with
the support of the relevant international and regional
organisations, should:
a) Establish mechanisms to ensure that land users,
particularly women, are the main actors in implementing
improved land use, including agroforestry systems,
in combating land degradation;
b) Promote efficient extension-service facilities
in areas prone to desertification and drought, particularly
for training farmers and pastoralists in the improved
management of land and water resources in drylands.
(d) Capacity-building
12.25. Governments
at the appropriate level and local communities, with
the support of the relevant international and regional
organisations, should:
a) Develop and adopt, through appropriate national
legislation, and introduce institutionally, new and
environmentally sound development-oriented land-use
policies;
b) Support community-based people's organisations,
especially farmers and pastoralists.
(C.) Developing
and strengthening integrated development programmes
for the eradication of poverty and promotion of alternative
livelihood systems in areas prone to desertification
(back to top)
Basis for action
12.26. In areas
prone to desertification and drought, current livelihood
and resource-use systems are not able to maintain
living standards. In most of the arid and semi-arid
areas, the traditional livelihood systems based on
agropastoral systems are often inadequate and unsustainable,
particularly in view of the effects of drought and
increasing demographic pressure. Poverty is a major
factor in accelerating the rate of degradation and
desertification. Action is therefore needed to rehabilitate
and improve the agropastoral systems for sustainable
management of rangelands, as well as alternative livelihood
systems.
Objectives
12.27. The objectives
of this programme area are:
a) To create the capacity of village communities
and pastoral groups to take charge of their development
and the management of their land resources on a socially
equitable and ecologically sound basis;
b) To improve production systems in order to achieve
greater productivity within approved programmes for
conservation of national resources and in the framework
of an integrated approach to rural development;
c) To provide opportunities for alternative livelihoods
as a basis for reducing pressure on land resources
while at the same time providing additional sources
of income, particularly for rural populations, thereby
improving their standard of living.
Activities
(a) Management-related
activities
12.28. Governments
at the appropriate level, with the support of the
relevant international and regional organisations,
should:
a) Adopt policies at the national level regarding
a decentralised approach to land-resource management,
delegating responsibility to rural organisations;
b) Create or strengthen rural organisations in charge
of village and pastoral land management;
c) Establish and develop local, national and intersectoral
mechanisms to handle environmental and developmental
consequences of land tenure expressed in terms of
land use and land ownership. Particular attention
should be given to protecting the property rights
of women and pastoral and nomadic groups living in
rural areas;
d) Create or strengthen village associations focused
on economic activities of common pastoral interest
(market gardening, transformation of agricultural
products, livestock, herding, etc.);
e) Promote rural credit and mobilisation of rural
savings through the establishment of rural banking
systems;
f) Develop infrastructure, as well as local production
and marketing capacity, by involving the local people
to promote alternative livelihood systems and alleviate
poverty;
g) Establish a revolving fund for credit to rural
entrepreneurs and local groups to facilitate the establishment
of cottage industries/business ventures and credit
for input to agropastoral activities.
(b) Data and information
12.29. Governments
at the appropriate level, with the support of the
relevant international and regional organisations,
should:
a) Conduct socio-economic baseline studies in order
to have a good understanding of the situation in the
programme area regarding, particularly, resource and
land tenure issues, traditional land-management practices
and characteristics of production systems;
b) Conduct inventory of natural resources (soil,
water and vegetation) and their state of degradation,
based primarily on the knowledge of the local population
(e.g., rapid rural appraisal);
c) Disseminate information on technical packages
adapted to the social, economic and ecological conditions
of each;
d) Promote exchange and sharing of information concerning
the development of alternative livelihoods with other
agro-ecological regions.
(c) International and regional
cooperation and coordination
12.30. Governments
at the appropriate level, and with the support of
the relevant international and regional organisations,
should:
a) Promote cooperation and exchange of information
among the arid and semi-arid land research institutions
concerning techniques and technologies to improve
land and labour productivity, as well as viable production
systems;
b) Coordinate and harmonise the implementation of
programmes and projects funded by the international
organisation communities and non-governmental organisations
that are directed towards the alleviation of poverty
and promotion of an alternative livelihood system.
Means of implementation
(a) Financing and cost
evaluation
12.31. The Conference
secretariat has estimated the costs for this programme
area in chapter 3 (Combating poverty) and chapter
14 (Promoting sustainable agriculture and rural development).
(b) Scientific and technological
means
12.32. Governments
at the appropriate level, and with the support of
the relevant international and regional organisations,
should:
a) Undertake applied research in land use with the
support of local research institutions;
b) Facilitate regular national, regional and interregional
communication on and exchange of information and experience
between extension officers and researchers;
c) Support and encourage the introduction and use
of technologies for the generation of alternative
sources of incomes.
(c) Human resource development
12.33. Governments
at the appropriate level, with the support of the
relevant international and regional organisations,
should:
a) Train members of rural organisations in management
skills and train agropastoralists in such special
techniques as soil and water conservation, water harvesting,
agroforestry and small-scale irrigation;
b) Train extension agents and officers in the participatory
approach to integrated land management.
(d) Capacity-building
12.34. Governments
at the appropriate level, with the support of the
relevant international and regional organisations,
should establish and maintain mechanisms to ensure
the integration into sectoral and national development
plans and programmes of strategies for poverty alleviation
among the inhabitants of lands prone to desertification.
(D.) Developing
comprehensive anti-desertification programmes and
integrating them into national development plans and
national environmental planning (back
to top)
Basis for action
12.35. In a number
of developing countries affected by desertification,
the natural resource base is the main resource upon
which the development process must rely. The social
systems interacting with land resources make the problem
much more complex, requiring an integrated approach
to the planning and management of land resources.
Action plans to combat desertification and drought
should include management aspects of the environment
and development, thus conforming with the approach
of integrating national development plans and national
environmental action plans.
Objectives
12.36. The objectives
of this programme area are:
a) To strengthen national institutional capabilities
to develop appropriate anti-desertification programmes
and to integrate them into national development planning;
b) To develop and integrate strategic planning frameworks
for the development, protection and management of
natural resources in dryland areas into national development
plans, including national plans to combat desertification,
and environmental action plans in countries most prone
to desertification;
c) To initiate a long-term process for implementing
and monitoring strategies related to natural resources
management;
d) To strengthen regional and international cooperation
for combating desertification through, inter alia,
the adoption of legal and other instruments.
Activities
(a) Management-related
activities
12.37. Governments
at the appropriate level, and with the support of
the relevant international and regional organisations,
should:
a) Establish or strengthen, national and local anti-desertification
authorities within government and local executive
bodies, as well as local committees/associations of
land users, in all rural communities affected, with
a view to organising working cooperation between all
actors concerned, from the grass-roots level (farmers
and pastoralists) to the higher levels of government;
b) Develop national plans of action to combat desertification
and as appropriate, make them integral parts of national
development plans and national environmental action
plans;
c) Implement policies directed towards improving
land use, managing common lands appropriately, providing
incentives to small farmers and pastoralists, involving
women and encouraging private investment in the development
of drylands;
d) Ensure coordination among ministries and institutions
working on anti-desertification programmes at national
and local levels.
(b) Data and information
12.38. Governments
at the appropriate level, and with the support of
the relevant international and regional organisations,
should promote information exchange and cooperation
with respect to national planning and programming
among affected countries, inter alia, through networking.
(c) International and regional
cooperation and coordination
12.39. The relevant
international organisations, multilateral financial
institutions, non-governmental organisations and bilateral
agencies should strengthen their cooperation in assisting
with the preparation of desertification control programmes
and their integration into national planning strategies,
with the establishment of national coordinating and
systematic observation mechanisms and with the regional
and global networking of these plans and mechanisms.
12.40. The General
Assembly, at its forty-seventh session, should be
requested to establish, under the aegis of the General
Assembly, an intergovernmental negotiating committee
for the elaboration of an international convention
to combat desertification in those countries experiencing
serious drought and/or desertification, particularly
in Africa, with a view to finalising such a convention
by June 1994.
Means of implementation
(a) Financing and cost
evaluation
12.41. The Conference
secretariat has estimated the average total annual
cost (1993-2000) of implementing the activities of
this programme to be about $180 million, including
about $90 million from the international community
on grant or concessional terms. These are indicative
and order-of-magnitude estimates only and have not
been reviewed by Governments. Actual costs and financial
terms, including any that are non-concessional, will
depend upon, inter alia, the specific strategies and
programmes Governments decide upon for implementation.
(b) Scientific and technological
means
12.42. Governments
at the appropriate level, with the support of the
relevant international and regional organisations,
should:
a) Develop and introduce appropriate improved sustainable
agricultural and pastoral technologies that are socially
and environmentally acceptable and economically feasible;
b) Undertake applied study on the integration of
environmental and developmental activities into national
development plans.
(c) Human resource development
12.43. Governments
at the appropriate level, with the support of the
relevant international and regional organisations,
should undertake nationwide major anti-desertification
awareness/training campaigns within countries affected
through existing national mass media facilities, educational
networks and newly created or strengthened extension
services. This should ensure people's access to knowledge
of desertification and drought and to national plans
of action to combat desertification.
(d) Capacity-building
12.44. Governments
at the appropriate level, with the support of the
relevant international and regional organisations,
should establish and maintain mechanisms to ensure
coordination of sectoral ministries and institutions,
including local-level institutions and appropriate
non-governmental organisations, in integrating anti-desertification
programmes into national development plans and national
environmental action plans.
(E). Developing
comprehensive drought preparedness and drought-relief
schemes, including self-help arrangements, for drought-prone
areas and designing programmes to cope with environmental
refugees (back
to top)
Basis for action
12.45. Drought,
in differing degrees of frequency and severity, is
a recurring phenomenon throughout much of the developing
world, especially Africa. Apart from the human toll
- an estimated 3 million people died in the mid-1980s
because of drought in sub-Saharan Africa - the economic
costs of drought-related disasters are also high in
terms of lost production, misused inputs and diversion
of development resources.
12.46. Early-warning
systems to forecast drought will make possible the
implementation of drought-preparedness schemes. Integrated
packages at the farm and watershed level, such as
alternative cropping strategies, soil and water conservation
and promotion of water harvesting techniques, could
enhance the capacity of land to cope with drought
and provide basic necessities, thereby minimising
the number of environmental refugees and the need
for emergency drought relief. At the same time, contingency
arrangements for relief are needed for periods of
acute scarcity.
Objectives
12.47. The objectives
of this programme area are:
a) To develop national strategies for drought preparedness
in both the short and long term, aimed at reducing
the vulnerability of production systems to drought;
b) To strengthen the flow of early-warning information
to decision makers and land users to enable nations
to implement strategies for drought intervention;
c) To develop and integrate drought-relief schemes
and means of coping with environmental refugees into
national and regional development planning.
Activities
(a) Management-related
activities
12.48. In drought-prone
areas, Governments at the appropriate level, with
the support of the relevant international and regional
organisations, should:
a) Design strategies to deal with national food deficiencies
in periods of production shortfall. These strategies
should deal with issues of storage and stocks, imports,
port facilities, food storage, transport and distribution;
b) Improve national and regional capacity for agrometeorology
and contingency crop planning. Agrometeorology links
the frequency, content and regional coverage of weather
forecasts with the requirements of crop planning and
agricultural extension;
c) Prepare rural projects for providing short-term
rural employment to drought-affected households. The
loss of income and entitlement to food is a common
source of distress in times of drought. Rural works
help to generate the income required to buy food for
poor households;
d) Establish contingency arrangements, where necessary,
for food and fodder distribution and water supply;
e) Establish budgetary mechanisms for providing,
at short notice, resources for drought relief;
f) Establish safety nets for the most vulnerable
households.
(b) Data and information
12.49. Governments
of affected countries, at the appropriate level, with
the support of the relevant international and regional
organisations, should:
a) Implement research on seasonal forecasts to improve
contingency planning and relief operations and allow
preventive measures to be taken at the farm level,
such as the selection of appropriate varieties and
farming practices, in times of drought;
b) Support applied research on ways of reducing water
loss from soils, on ways of increasing the water absorption
capacities of soils and on water harvesting techniques
in drought-prone areas;
c) Strengthen national early-warning systems, with
particular emphasis on the area of risk-mapping, remote-sensing,
agrometeorological modelling, integrated multidisciplinary
crop-forecasting techniques and computerised food
supply/demand analysis.
(c) International and regional
cooperation and coordination
12.50. Governments
at the appropriate level, with the support of the
relevant international and regional organisations,
should:
a) Establish a system of stand-by capacities in terms
of foodstock, logistical support, personnel and finance
for a speedy international response to drought-related
emergencies;
b) Support programmes of the World Meteorological
Organisation (WMO) on agrohydrology and agrometeorology,
the Programme of the Regional Training Centre for
Agrometeorology and Operational Hydrology and their
Applications (AGRHYMET), drought-monitoring centres
and the African Centre of Meteorological Applications
for Development (ACMAD), as well as the efforts of
the Permanent Inter-State Committee on Drought Control
in the Sahel (CILSS) and the Intergovernmental Authority
for Drought and Development (IGADD);
c) Support FAO programmes and other programmes for
the development of national early-warning systems
and food security assistance schemes;
d) Strengthen and expand the scope of existing regional
programmes and the activities of appropriate United
Nations organs and organisations, such as the World
Food Programme (WFP), the Office of the United Nations
Disaster Relief Coordinator (UNDRO) and the United
Nations Sudano-Sahelian Office as well as of non-governmental
organisations, aimed at mitigating the effects of
drought and emergencies.
Means of implementation
(a) Financing and cost
evaluation
12.51. The Conference
secretariat has estimated the average total annual
cost (1993-2000) of implementing the activities of
this programme to be about $1.2 billion, including
about $1.1 billion from the international community
on grant or concessional terms. These are indicative
and order-of-magnitude estimates only and have not
been reviewed by Governments. Actual costs and financial
terms, including any that are non-concessional, will
depend upon, inter alia, the specific strategies and
programmes Governments decide upon for implementation.
(b) Scientific and technological
means
12.52. Governments
at the appropriate level and drought-prone communities,
with the support of the relevant international and
regional organisations, should:
a) Use traditional mechanisms to cope with hunger
as a means of channelling relief and development assistance;
b) Strengthen and develop national, regional and
local interdisciplinary research and training capabilities
for drought-prevention strategies.
(c) Human resource development
12.53. Governments
at the appropriate level, with the support of the
relevant international and regional organisations,
should:
a) Promote the training of decision makers and land
users in the effective utilisation of information
from early-warning systems;
b) Strengthen research and national training capabilities
to assess the impact of drought and to develop methodologies
to forecast drought.
(d) Capacity-building
12.54. Governments
at the appropriate level, with the support of the
relevant international and regional organisations,
should:
a) Improve and maintain mechanisms with adequate
staff, equipment and finances for monitoring drought
parameters to take preventive measures at regional,
national and local levels;
b) Establish interministerial linkages and coordinating
units for drought monitoring, impact assessment and
management of drought-relief schemes.
(F.) Encouraging
and promoting popular participation and environmental
education, focusing on desertification control and
management of the effects of drought (back
to top)
Basis for action
12.55. The experience
to date on the successes and failures of programmes
and projects points to the need for popular support
to sustain activities related to desertification and
drought control. But it is necessary to go beyond
the theoretical ideal of popular participation and
to focus on obtaining actual active popular involvement,
rooted in the concept of partnership. This implies
the sharing of responsibilities and the mutual involvement
of all parties. In this context, this programme area
should be considered an essential supporting component
of all desertification-control and drought-related
activities.
Objectives
12.56. The objectives
of this programme area are:
a) To develop and increase public awareness and knowledge
concerning desertification and drought, including
the integration of environmental education in the
curriculum of primary and secondary schools;
b) To establish and promote true partnership between
government authorities, at both the national and local
levels, other executing agencies, non-governmental
organisations and land users stricken by drought and
desertification, giving land users a responsible role
in the planning and execution processes in order to
benefit fully from development projects;
c) To ensure that the partners understand one another's
needs, objectives and points of view by providing
a variety of means such as training, public awareness
and open dialogue;
d) To support local communities in their own efforts
in combating desertification, and to draw on the knowledge
and experience of the populations concerned, ensuring
the full participation of women and indigenous populations.
Activities
(a) Management-related
activities
12.57. Governments
at the appropriate level, with the support of the
relevant international and regional organisations,
should:
a) Adopt policies and establish administrative structures
for more decentralised decision-making and implementation;
b) Establish and utilise mechanisms for the consultation
and involvement of land users and for enhancing capability
at the grass-roots level to identify and/or contribute
to the identification and planning of action;
c) Define specific programme/project objectives in
cooperation with local communities; design local management
plans to include such measures of progress, thereby
providing a means of altering project design or changing
management practices, as appropriate;
d) Introduce legislative, institutional/organisational
and financial measures to secure user involvement
and access to land resources;
e) Establish and/or expand favourable conditions
for the provision of services, such as credit facilities
and marketing outlets for rural populations;
f) Develop training programmes to increase the level
of education and participation of people, particularly
women and indigenous groups, through, inter alia,
literacy and the development of technical skills;
g) Create rural banking systems to facilitate access
to credit for rural populations, particularly women
and indigenous groups, and to promote rural savings;
h) Adopt appropriate policies to stimulate private
and public investment.
(b) Data and information
12.58. Governments
at the appropriate level, with the support of the
relevant international and regional organisations,
should:
a) Review, develop and disseminate gender-disaggregated
information, skills and know-how at all levels on
ways of organising and promoting popular participation;
b) Accelerate the development of technological know-how,
focusing on appropriate and intermediate technology;
c) Disseminate knowledge about applied research results
on soil and water issues, appropriate species, agricultural
techniques and technological know-how.
(c) International and regional
cooperation and coordination
12.59. Governments
at the appropriate level, and with the support of
the relevant international and regional organisations,
should:
a) Develop programmes of support to regional organisations
such as CILSS, IGADD, SADCC and the Arab Maghreb Union
and other intergovernmental organisations in Africa
and other parts of the world, to strengthen outreach
programmes and increase the participation of non-governmental
organisations together with rural populations;
b) Develop mechanisms for facilitating cooperation
in technology and promote such cooperation as an element
of all external assistance and activities related
to technical assistance projects in the public or
private sector;
c) Promote collaboration among different actors in
environment and development programmes;
d) Encourage the emergence of representative organisational
structures to foster and sustain interorganisational
cooperation.
Means of implementation
(a) Financing and cost
evaluation
12.60. The Conference
secretariat has estimated the average total annual
cost (1993-2000) of implementing the activities of
this programme to be about $1.0 billion, including
about $500 million from the international community
on grant or concessional terms. These are indicative
and order-of-magnitude estimates only and have not
been reviewed by Governments. Actual costs and financial
terms, including any that are non-concessional, will
depend upon, inter alia, the specific strategies and
programmes Governments decide upon for implementation.
(b) Scientific and technological
means
12.61. Governments,
at the appropriate level, and with the support of
the relevant international and regional organisations,
should promote the development of indigenous know-how
and technology transfer.
(c) Human resource development
12.62. Governments,
at the appropriate level, and with the support of
the relevant international and regional organisations,
should:
a) Support and/or strengthen institutions involved
in public education, including the local media, schools
and community groups;
b) Increase the level of public education.
(d) Capacity-building
12.63. Governments
at the appropriate level, and with the support of
the relevant international and regional organisations,
should promote members of local rural organisations
and train and appoint more extension officers working
at the local level.
|