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Wetland Convention seeks use of wetlands to tackle climate change... |
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by Victor eke mba | 08-02-2019 19:10
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With time running out to reduce global carbon emissions by 45 per cent before 2030 and limit global warming to well below 2C, The Ramsar Convention said wetlands provide a natural solution to making a daunting task more achievable.
According to the convention, harnessing of the power of the planet¡¯s most effective carbon sinks, wetlands in national and global efforts will curb greenhouse gas emissions. The convention, which made the call in commemoration of the wetlands day celebration , stressed that wetlands such as peatlands and marshes, as well as coastal and marine areas like estuaries, lagoons, mangroves and coral reefs, are essential to regulating the global climate along with forests and oceans. Peatlands, which only cover three per cent of the planet¡¯s land surface, store 30 per cent of land-based carbon. This is twice as much as all the world¡¯s forests combined, according to the Ramsar Convention¡¯s Global Wetland Outlook . Coastal and marine wetlands, including salt marshes, mangroves and sea grass beds are similarly critical carbon storage grounds. World Wetland Day marks the creation of the Ramsar Convention on Wetlands on 2nd February 1971. With a large and growing number of countries marking the Day, it aims to raise awareness and to highlight the important value of wetlands for people and the planet. Wetlands and Climate Change is the theme for World Wetlands Day. ¡°The benefits of doing so are clear and multi-faceted. For example, by restoring 10,000 of 45,000 hectares of lost mangrove forests, Senegal will store half a million tons of CO over 20 years. ¡°The task facing the world is colossal but not insurmountable. Where there is a will, there is a way. With wetlands, we have a way to save our planet,¡± Urrego added. The Paris climate agreement recognizes the role wetlands play in limiting the amount of carbon in the atmosphere. Yet wetlands are being lost three times faster than forests. Approximately 35 per cent of the world¡¯s wetlands disappeared between 1970 and 2015 due to changes in land use, urban growth, increased agriculture, as well as water diversion from wetlands and infrastructure development. Currently, CO emissions from drained or burned peatlands amount to 10 per cent of all annual fossil fuel emissions. Wetlands are not only critical to carbon storage, they are also instrumental in mitigating, adapting to and building resilience to the impacts of natural disasters. When disaster strikes, it usually manifests itself through water.Floods, landslides, tsunamis, storms, heat waves, droughts are all becoming more frequent and more intense. According to the World Meteorological Organization they have doubled in 35 years. The world¡¯s largest mangrove reforestation programme will also buffer 200,000 people against storms and strengthen food security through increased rice and fish production. The draining of 45 per cent of these peatlands is responsible for almost 25 per cent of the region¡¯s annual CO emissions. In Asia, the storm protection benefits of mangroves in southern Thailand have been valued at USD10,821 per hectare. Mangroves are being restored along the Krabi River Estuary to protect the coastal communities against tropical storms, while Indonesia has committed to restoring two million hectares of peatlands in response to devastating fires in 2015-2016 caused by drought and the draining of peatlands. Every effort to jointly protect, restore and wisely use all wetlands from now on will matter with each effort multiplying progress towards limiting global warming to below 2C. The Ramsar Convention on Wetlands has 170 Contracting Parties who are committed to conserve and wisely use all wetlands; designate and conserve at least one Wetland of International Importance or Ramsar Sites; cooperate across national boundaries on transboundary wetlands, shared systems and species, and report on any adverse human-induced changes to a Ramsar Site and act to restore it to its former state. |
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4 Comments
Thank you for your beautiful report on wetland :)
Posted 18-02-2019 03:42
Hello Victor, I was personally looking for mangrove-living wetland regions globally and this helped me a lot to get to know more about Senegal and relative countries.
Carbon storage within mangrove trees do not mean that we 'literally removed' CO2 and other destructive greenhouse gases (a bit) out of our atmosphere but it means that they 'stored them' inside them.
As this means loss of mangrove trees and wetlands will bring disastrous and fatal emission rate increase in CO2, we need to secure them as possible :)
Thanks for your report about wetland importance and future!
Posted 12-02-2019 11:07
The report is so interesting and provides a detail account on it. Thank you so much. I really loved your report. With the knowledge I have gained from this report, I am really eagered to read your next report.
Wetland is the natural solution to climate change and we must protect it as it has so much importance. I really loved the theme of this year Wetland day, Wetland and Climate Change. I have also written a report on Wetland and Climate Change, I do hope that you had read that report.
Thank you for the report.
Green Cheers from Nepal :) :)
Yours,
Kushal Naharki
Posted 09-02-2019 17:10
Great insight and information! Thanks for sharing
Posted 09-02-2019 02:57