Context:
“Arresting land degradation” was included among the top priorities by the G20 Working Group on Environment and Climate Sustainability.
About Land degradation in India:
- Rajasthan is the most land degradation-prone state. This is followed by Maharashtra and Gujarat. The most rapid deterioration in land quality is in the north-eastern region.
- Low per-capita availability of land: The per capita availability of arable land has shrunk to merely 0.16 hectares now which is much lower than the global average of 0.29 hectares.
- Reduction in land quality: It is mainly because of mismanagement and indiscriminate anthropogenic activity.
Major reasons of land degradation:
- Deforestation
- Wind and water erosion
- Imprudent alteration of land use
- Excessive pressure on land beyond its carrying capacity
- Flawed farm practices such as imbalanced use of chemical fertilisers, inadequate application of organic manures, indiscriminate tillage and mismanagement of many other kinds
Steps taken:
- India has committed to achieve land degradation neutrality by 2030.
- According to a recent report issued by the International Union for Conservation of Nature, India has restored around 9.8 mha of degraded land between 2011 and 2018 — an average rate of reclamation of around 1.4 mha a year.
Steps required: India should take steps like:
- To safeguard the physical, chemical, and biological health of the existing normal land.
- To invest in land improvement.
- To evolve and meticulously enforce judicious land use policy based on the capability classification of land.
Way Forward:
- To restore best of the possibility, there is a need to have proper working collaboration of the Union, respective States and local authorities within the judicial land policies.
News Source: The Business Standard
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