Natural disasters “are not ‘natural’ at all but are the consequence of our
scant regard for the ecosystem services our natural environment provides,” write
the authors of “Natural
Security: Protected areas and hazard mitigation,” fifth in the Arguments for
Protection series published jointly by the World Wildlife Fund and
Equilibrium.
Authors Sue Stolton, Nigel Dudley, and
Jonathan Randall argue that “investment in a well-managed, ecologically
representative, global system of protected areas can produce benefits far beyond
the conservation of biodiversity.” They find that protected areas can prevent
natural hazards from turning into natural disasters in three ways:
•
Natural ecosystems such as coastal mangroves, coral reefs, forests, and
floodplains can serve as buffers against tsunamis and hurricanes;
•
Traditional ecosystems such as terraced crop-growing, agroforestry systems, and
fruit tree forests can protect arid lands; and
• Protected areas can restore
ecosystems that have been damaged by natural hazards.
Regrettably, “the
under protection of some biomes [such as coastal mangrove forests]…and the
exploitation rather than the conservation of forests and wetlands has left many
areas extremely vulnerable to disaster,” write Stolton and colleagues. These
environmental consequences are driven by numerous forces, one of which is
population growth. “Around the world,” they write, “the pressures of poverty,
population growth and inequitable land rights are forcing people to live or
produce food in the most vulnerable areas.”
This unfortunate reality,
though, could be greatly improved by relatively small investments. For example,
a $1.1 million investment in mangrove forests in Vietnam saved the country $7.3
million in sea dike maintenance and protected villages from the devastation of
Typhoon Wukong in 2000. Protected areas are also important in the developed
world. For more than 150 years, the Swiss government has used reforestation
programs to reduce the risk of avalanches, flooding, and landslides in the Alps.
Aside from protecting the land and people of the region, it is estimated that
these forests add between two and three billion dollars per year to the Swiss
economy, for the most part through revenue from the tourism industry in the
region.
These examples demonstrate that the world needs more—and better—protected areas, particularly in ecologically vulnerable regions. Sadly, preventive measures often take a back seat to responses, when in fact, they could make such responses unnecessary.
Download the report here (pdf, 5.28MB)POSTED BY Sonia Schmanski
Source: News Security Beat