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Earth Policy News - World's Rangelands Deteriorating
Under Mounting Pressure February 6, 2002
Lester R. Brown
http://www.earth-policy.org/Updates/Update6.htm
In late January, a dust storm originating in northwestern China engulfed
Lhasa, the capital of Tibet, closing the airport for three days and
disrupting tourism. Such dust storms are no longer uncommon. Dust storms
originating in Central Asia, coupled with those originating in Saharan
Africa that now frequently reach the Caribbean remind us that
desertification of the world's rangelands is ongoing.  Saharan dust storm extending out into the Atlantic, NASA photo.
Even though the damage from overgrazing is spreading, the world's livestock
population continues to grow, tracking the growth in human population.
As
world population increased from 2.5 billion in 1950 to 6.1 billion in 2001,
the world's cattle herd went from 720 million to 1.53 billion. The number
of
sheep and goats expanded from 1.04 billion to 1.75 billion.
With 180 million pastoralists worldwide now trying to make a living tending
3.3 billion cattle, sheep, and goats, grasslands are under heavy pressure.
As a result of overstocking, grasslands are now deteriorating in much of
Africa, the Middle East, Central Asia, the northern part of the Indian
subcontinent, Mongolia, and much of northern China. Overgrazing of
rangelands initially reduces their productivity but eventually it destroys
them, leaving desert. Degraded rangeland, worldwide, totals 680 million
hectares, five times the U.S. cropland area.
Rangelands, consisting almost entirely of land that is too dry or too
steeply sloping to support crop production, account for one fifth of the
earth's land surface, more than double the area that is cropped. Tapping
the
productivity of this vast area depends on ruminants-cattle, sheep, and
goats--animals whose complex digestive systems enable them to convert
roughage into food, including beef, mutton, and milk, and industrial
materials, importantly leather and wool. Some four fifths of world beef and mutton production, roughly 52 million
tons, comes from animals that forage on rangelands. In Africa, where grain
is scarce, 230 million cattle, 246 million sheep, and 175 million goats
are
supported almost entirely by grazing and browsing. The number of livestock,
a cornerstone of many African economies, often exceeds grassland carrying
capacity by half or more. A study that charted the mounting pressures on
grasslands in nine southern African countries found that the capacity of
the
land to sustain livestock is diminishing.
Fodder needs of livestock in nearly all developing countries now exceed
the
sustainable yield of rangelands and other forage resources. In India, with
the world's largest cattle herd, the demand for fodder in 2000 was estimated
at 700 million tons, while the sustainable supply totaled just 540 million
tons. A report from New Delhi indicates that in states with the most serious
land degradation, such as Rajasthan and Karnataka, fodder supplies satisfy
only 50-80 percent of needs, leaving large numbers of emaciated,
unproductive cattle.
China faces similarly difficult challenges. The northwest of China, where
there are no land ownership rights and no fences, has become a vast grazing
commons. Since the economic reforms of 1978, there has been little incentive
for individual families to limit the size of their flocks and herds. As
a
result, livestock numbers have soared. The United States, which has a
comparable grazing capacity, has 98 million head of cattle while China
has
130 million head. But the big difference is in the number of sheep and
goats: 9 million in the United States, 290 million in China.
In Gonge County, for example, in eastern Qinghai Province, the local
grasslands can support an estimated 3.7 million sheep. But by the end of
1998, the region's flock had reached 5.5 million--far beyond its carrying
capacity. The result is fast-deteriorating grassland and the creation of
a
new desert, replete with sand dunes.
The mounting pressures on rangelands in the Middle East are illustrated
by
Iran, a country of 71 million people. The 8 million cattle and 81 million
sheep and goats that graze its rangelands supply not only milk and meat,
but
also the wool for the country's fabled rug-making industry. In a land where
sheep and goats outnumber humans, and where rangelands are being pushed
to
their limits, the current livestock population may not be sustainable.
Land degradation from overgrazing is taking a heavy economic toll in lost
livestock productivity. In the early stages of overgrazing, the costs show
up as lower land productivity. But if the process continues, it destroys
vegetation, leading to the erosion of soil and the eventual creation of
wasteland. A U.N. assessment of the earth's dryland regions, done in 1991,
estimated that livestock production losses from rangeland degradation
exceeded $23 billion.
In Africa, the annual loss of rangeland productivity is estimated at $7
billion, more than the gross domestic product of Ethiopia. In Asia,
livestock losses from rangeland degradation total over $8 billion. See
table earth-policy.org/Updates/Update5_data.htm Together, Africa
and Asia account for two thirds of the global loss.
Arresting the deterioration of the world's rangelands presents a difficult
challenge. One key to arresting the growth in livestock populations is
to
stop the growth in human populations. Iran, recognizing the threat of
overgrazing and other population-related stresses it was facing some 15
years ago, dropped its population growth from 4 percent a year to scarcely
1
percent in 2001, illustrating what can be done with committed leadership.
Another key to lightening pressure on rangelands is the spreading practice
of feeding livestock crop residues that would otherwise be burned, either
because they are needed for fuel or because double-cropping requires
destruction of the residues. India has been uniquely successful in
converting crop residues into milk--expanding production from 20 million
tons in 1961 to 80 million tons in 2001, and without feeding grain. Its
farmers did so almost entirely by using crop residues and by stall-feeding
grass cut and collected by hand.
China also has a large potential to feed corn stalks and wheat and rice
straw to cattle or sheep. As the world's leading producer of both rice
and
wheat and the second-ranked producer of corn, China annually harvests an
estimated 500 million tons of straw, corn stalks, and other crop residues.
Feeding crop residues in the major crop-producing provinces of east central
China--Hebei, Shandong, Henan, and Anhui--has created a "Beef Belt," whose
beef output dwarfs that of the northwestern grazing provinces of Inner
Mongolia, Qinghai, and Xinjiang.
In rangeland reclamation, where successes are few, a promising low-cost
technique for reclaiming overgrazed and exhausted rangeland is being
developed at the International Center for Agricultural Research in the
Dry
Areas (ICARDA) in Syria. ICARDA scientists have developed a simple implement
that slightly depresses the soil in double rows 20 centimeters (8 inches)
apart. The implement seeds grass in these twin depressions, which follow
the
contour of the land, enabling them to trap rainwater runoff and restore
vegetation.
It will take an enormous effort to stabilize livestock populations at a
sustainable level and to restore the world's degraded rangelands. This
will
be costly, but failing to halt the desertification of rangelands will be
even costlier as flocks and herds eventually shrink and as the resulting
poverty forces large-scale migration from the affected areas. -- end -- Additional data and information sources at www.earth-policy.org or contact
jlarsen@earth-policy.org
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For more information on rangelands, see Chapter 7 of
Eco-Economy: Building an Economy for the Earth.
earth-policy.org/Books/index.htm
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