Massive land conversion threatens our biosphere
Category: Climate change | Date: May 05 2008 | By: admin
While in the USA I attended a conference on Rewards for Ecosystem Services at the Land Tenure Center at Madison University titled Designing pro-poor rewards for ecosystem services
What are rewards for ecosystem services? Well it’s a new field that tries to reward those who are protecting the environment and to pay them for the services generated. You can read about it here
We’re all used to the idea of carbon credits, this idea goes a little further and provides mechanisms for payments for biodiversity, clean water, air and aesthetic values. Payment for Ecosystem Services is the new buzz word in conservation and everyone is trying to take credit for leading in this field including WWF
Katoomba is probably the most talked about site – it is a really creative ecosystem services marketplace
Everything I knew about climate change and fossil fuels were thrown in the bin. Professor Jonathan Foley the founder of the Center for sustainability and Global Environment at Madison University (SAGE) presented the most compelling evidence that the main cause of climate change is in fact land use change – something that we tend not to think about. You can download his presenatation here
Professor Foley believes that land-use change has already irreparably altered the earths biosphere.
Land use change is happening everywhere. Consider these facts
- 40% of the earth is under agriculture of this,
- 18 million km2 is under crops, and
- 30 million km2 is under pasture
- 35% of the planets photosynthesis is controlled by humans
- Water use has increased by 3 times in the last 50 years
- Nitrogen and Phosphorous inputs to the environment have doubled
- Land under agriculture has increased by 12% in the last 40 years,
- Agricultural intensification has increased by 70%.
- Use of agricultural fertilizers has increased by a whopping 700%
Not surprisingly he concludes, global land use and agriculture produce ore green house gasses than any other activity.
You can download this image at the World Resources Institute website here
Professor Foley fears that land conversion from diverse ecosystems to simple monocultures is one of the greatest threats to the survival of humans on earth. In this illustration he shows how this leads to a collapse of ecosystem services.
I can relate to this directly. In Kenya organic farming is becoming not only fashionable but the cheap alternative – which is critical now that world food prices are shooting through the roof (prices have gone up by 85% in the last 18 months). When my sister Su started an organic company called Green Dreams none of us expected it to make money in Kenya. Surprisingly there is a good market for healthy food. She lost her farm in the post election crisis but this has not stopped her. She now trains and promotes local organic farmers and promotes the cultivation of a diverse array of traditional crops as one important way of achieving sustainability.
Predicting that the election crisis would lead to a food shortage as people fled their farms, she initiated a program to distribute seeds to displaced families so that they could plant on tiny areas - even IDP camps. Recently she discovered a new need in Africa’s biggest slum – the famous Kibera, which is on our doorstep of Nairobi. This is where she is now doing something very exciting, she’s training ex convicts to reclaim garbage heaps for farming.
Here they are creating a worm farm to generate organic fertilizer. I encouraged Su to start a blog because it is so fascinating and her discoveries are so useful - everything she is doing can be replicated elsewhere in Africa. I’m so pleased that she followed my advice, you can now follow the story of this unconventional organic farmer and the conversion of a garbage dump in Kibera to a productive garden here.
Kenya Falling - Again?
Category: Emergencies | Date: Apr 08 2008 | By: admin
As I sit smug in Shanghai on leave where I am visiting my sister-in-law and her family, I can’t help but anxiously surf the web at odd hours in the night. Kenya is back on the headlines: Breakdown in Kenya Coalition Talks writes Nick Wadhams for Time and CNN. Yesterday, there was a fresh outburst of protests and demonstrations in Kibera, the largest slum in Kenya and Kisumu my hometown and stronghold of the opposition. The slogan has changed slightly: No, Raila, no peace. No cabinet, no peace…”
It always seems much worse than it is when one is so far away from home. News has a way of doing that so I scan through one of the main Kenyan blog aggregators reaching for sense and sensibility. Zimbabwe and Kenya seem to be merging in the African cyber landscape. Mugabe lost but he isn’t going to step down so easily and Kibaki’s party, the PNU is certainly not going to give equal space to Odinga’s opposition.
And as always, only the innocent will suffer. How do we keep allowing ourselves to be ruled by despots; by people who show no consideration whatsoever for the consequences of their actions the world over? Will it ever change?
A music video is circulating the internet having been censored by the Kenyan media mob. What more can we do but sing for in pain and sadness for our homelands…




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