1 / 44

Desert Outlook and Options for Action

GEO for World Deserts Chapter 5 Outline. Desert Outlook and Options for Action. September 7, 2005. Chapter Outline. Outlook for desert development Sustainability and human well-being in deserts Closing remarks: options for action. 1. Outlook for desert development.

Download Presentation

Desert Outlook and Options for Action

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. GEO for World Deserts Chapter 5 Outline Desert Outlook and Options for Action September 7, 2005

  2. Chapter Outline • Outlook for desert development • Sustainability and human well-being in deserts • Closing remarks: options for action

  3. 1. Outlook for desert development • Development scenarios: future trends for water, biodiversity and land degradation • Population dynamics and projections on resource demand • Human well-being and desert vulnerability • Driving forces for foreseen changes • Possible actions to be taken to generate desired outcomes

  4. 2. Sustainability and human well-being in deserts • Determinants of well-being in deserts • The maintenance of ecosystem services • The evolution of traditional knowledge • Adaptation of new technologies • Capacity building for desert sustainability • Public participation and socio-economic organization

  5. 1. Outlook for desert development

  6. Development scenarios: Water Current issues • Exploitation of non-renewable water resources • Water conflicts and cooperation • Quantity and quality • Year-to-year variability Future trends? • Difficulty in estimating renewable water resources • Climate change – increased aridity, decreasing water resources? • Growing population – growing demand

  7. Dryland area by basin Source: http://www.waterandnature.org/eatlas/

  8. Virtual water flows Source: http://www.waterandnature.org/eatlas/

  9. Projected water supply in major watersheds in drylands, 2025 White, R. P. and Nackoney, J. (2003) Drylands, people, and ecosystem goods and services: web-based geospatial analysis. World Resources Institute – p. 37

  10. Development scenarios: Biodiversity Current issues • Status of biodiversity in drylands • Inter-relationships between land degradation, climate change and biodiversity • Role of agro-diversity Future trends? • Lack of natural resource inventories • MA projections: conversion of grassland into other uses (agricultural, urban) • Conservation challenges

  11. Development scenarios: Land degradation Current issues • Vulnerability of drylands to climatic and anthropogenic stresses • Extent of land degradation/ desertification (e.g. GLASOD) • Degradation in oases: salinization etc. • Examples of land rehabilitation: Mortimore, Tiffen, Reij, … Future trends? • Population pressures and climate stress likely to increase  how to counter their impacts?

  12. "Dust Bowl" in the 1930's Picture from the National Archives. Source: http://www.globalchange.umich.edu/globalchange2/current/lectures/land_deg/land_deg.html

  13. Gully erosion in an arid environment Source: http://skagit.meas.ncsu.edu/~helena/gmslab/reports/CerlErosionTutorial/denix/Models%20and%20Processes/Gully.htm

  14. Iveti Hills June/July 1937 Iveti Hills January 1991 Machakos – then and now Tiffen, M., Mortimore, M. and Gichuki, F. (1994) More People, Less Erosion: Environmental Recovery in Kenya, John Wiley, Chichester. – p. 8

  15. Population dynamics and resource demand • Population in drylands significant and growing, despite environmental challenges • 94% of dryland population currently live in developing countries (Noin, 1998)  resource demand on the rise • Age structure and demographic transition • Relationships between population, resource demand, environment (Malthus, Boserup, etc.)

  16. White, R.P. and Nackoney, J. (2003): Drylands, people, and ecosystem goods and services: a web-based geospatial analysis. World Resource Institute. – p. 5

  17. White, R.P. and Nackoney, J. (2003): Drylands, people, and ecosystem goods and services: a web-based geospatial analysis. World Resource Institute. – p. 9

  18. Average animal population growth rates per country Source?

  19. Source: http://proutworld.prout.org/features/images/pgrow3.jpg

  20. Human well-being and desert vulnerability • Human well-being  in how far dependent on natural environment? • Drylands as non-equilibrium ecosystems • Biophysical and socio-economic vulnerability • Vulnerability vs. resilience  Global climate change  Anthropogenic impact • “Differential” vulnerability (of human communities)

  21. Threshold model Succession model Evolution of ecological paradigms non- equilibrium ??? State-and-transition model P a r a d i g m 1970 equilibrium Time

  22. Importance of succession model Succession model(Clements, 1916) Provided a planning and management tool for much of the past century • management objective: achieving an equilibrium condition under an equilibrium grazing policy • concept of carrying capacity: stocking rate at which sustainable grazing pressure is achieved Source: Westoby, Walker and Noy-Meir, 1989: p. 266

  23. Alternative models Threshold model (Holling, 1973 ; May, 1977 ; Hurd & Wolf, 1974 ; Noy-Meir, 1975) • Boundaries separate multiple equilibrium states in time and space • Sufficient modification of disturbance regime: threshold from one stable state to an alternative stable state is crossed • Ball and cup analogy Source: Briske, Fuhlendorf and Smeins, 2003: p. 604

  24. Alternative models State-and-transition model (Westoby, Walker, and Noy-Meir, 1989) • Capacity and flexibility to integrate both equilibrium and non-equilibrium vegetation dynamics • Multiple dimensions encompassed Source: Briske, Fuhlendorf and Smeins, 2003: p. 604

  25. Source: http://soils.usda.gov/use/worldsoils/mapindex/desert.html

  26. Driving forces for foreseen changes • Anthropogenic global warming: effect on drylands not yet clear (evidence for both increase and decrease in rainfall – depending on season and region) • Natural climatic cycles based on global patterns of pressure cells: e.g. El Nino etc. • Population growth: particularly in the developing world • Economic globalization: winners and losers  Complication due to multiple exposure

  27. Possible actions to be taken • Poverty alleviation (esp. among vulnerable households and women) • Strengthening adaptive capacities and local institutions (e.g. promoting diversity; facilitating flexible use of labor, etc.) • “Partitioning” as a result of globalization = global version of oasis economy

  28. 2. Sustainability and human well-being in deserts

  29. Supplementary Concept of sustainability • Brundtland Report (1987): “development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs” • “Triple bottom line”: environment, economy, social equity • Keywords: carrying capacity, maximum sustainable yield How does this concept apply to drylands? • Non-equilibrium dynamics • Pulse-reserve model in ecology (Noy-Meir, 1973) • Boom-and-bust economy • A new definition of sustainability for drylands? • How to buffer the “bust” in a boom-and-bust economy?

  30. Source: http://www.camelworld.com/images/PICT1505.JPG

  31. Determinants of well-being in deserts • Water availability "In every drop of water there is a grain of gold." (Uzbek proverb)  “By means of water, we give life to everything.” (Quran 21:30)  "You can live without love, but not without water" (Talmud) • Water conveyance and other infrastructure (energy, transportation, markets) • Policy framework (esp. water and land tenure), social protection etc.

  32. The maintenance of ecosystem services • How to value ecosystem services? – cost of substitution • Are they economic goods or human rights? • Appropriate management decisions require • reliable information on condition and trends of ecosystems • knowledge on possible consequences of alternative choices • enabling conditions to implement decisions

  33. The evolution of traditional knowledge • Traditional knowledge  static or “backward” • Guiding strategies: flexibility and opportunism • Benefits from long presence and accumulated “cultural wisdom” in very close contact with environment • Solutions local in scale (e.g. rainwater harvesting) and site-specific • Often sustainable, but…  Do these strategies offer room for desired “development”???

  34. Adaptation of new technologies • Renewable energy? (wind farms; solar farms; etc.) • Biotechnology? • Closed environments? • New technologies vs. socio-cultural background (technologically suitable  socially or culturally adapted) • Maintenance issues

  35. Capacity building for desert sustainability • Combining traditional knowledge and scientific findings • Not only bringing science to people: outreach, workshops, community involvement • but also bringing people into science: providing opportunities for higher education for desert dwellers

  36. Public participation and socio-economic organization • Decentralization • Empowerment of local people as decision-makers • Participatory, “people-centered” appraisal techniques (Chambers etc.)

  37. 3. Closing remarks: options for action

  38. Closing remarks: options for action • What is economically feasible (different deserts in different part of the world have different possibilities) vs. what is ecologically desirable • Preserving status quo in ecosystems vs. adapting societies to changes in them • Self-sufficient desert livelihoods/economies vs. dependence on regional/global exchange processes (“partitioning”) • Salvation through new technologies? e.g. desalinization of seawater • Salvation through globalization? • Or “precautionary principle”?

  39. Tourism

  40. Energy exploitation: wind Source: http://donb.furfly.net/photo_cd/l/b86.html

  41. Energy exploitation: solar KJC Operating Company, Mojave Desert, California

  42. Oasis economy Deserts – not a barriers but conduits for trade

  43. Closed environments

More Related