Though water is already scarce and food production will decline in the region, most Arab countries are doing little to prepare, reports say.
Food production in the Arab world will be hurt by sea level rises and water scarcity exacerbated by climate change, concluded two reports released last week, according to Reuters.
“Climate change will be critical for the Arab world because this region in particular already suffers from poverty, widespread aridity, water scarcity and social marginalization,” said Sima Bahous, Deputy Secretary General for Social Development in the Arab League, during a press conference for the release of The State of World Population 2009, a report by the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA).
“Awareness in the Arab region is getting better at this point and governments are aware of the impact of climate change,” said Henrietta Aswad, regional communication adviser for UNFPA, at the conference. “Yet more studies and data need to be conducted to basically have a better assessment of the real impact especially on vulnerable groups in the region.”
Developing a better knowledge base was one of the recommendations made during the Arab Forum on Environment and Development’s (AFED) conference on climate change in Beirut last week.
Delegates at the talks called on Arab governments to set emission reduction targets, create technical bodies for climate assessment, make climate change a public policy issue for all levels of government, and begin public awareness campaigns.
Delegates were concerned that Arab countries were doing little to adapt to climate changes, according to the conference declaration.
The meeting was convened to discuss the findings in the report, Impact of Climate Change on Arab Countries. The report underscored the dangers of sea level rise, among other things. A one-meter rise would put 12 percent of Egypt’s farmland at risk in the Nile Delta and inundate an area four times the size of Lebanon.
To secure more reliable food supplies, Arab countries are leading the trend of outsourcing agricultural production, Circle of Blue reported last week. Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Libya are among the countries leasing or buying farmland in sub-Saharan Africa, Latin America, Eastern Europe and South Asia.
Source: Reuters
Watch AFED’s 12-minute documentary ‘Wet and Dry’ on climate change in the Arab world.

