Desertification and its control along the route of China’s “Belt and
Road Initiative”: A critical review
Abstract
The “Belt and Road Initiative” (BRI) was anticipated in 2013 to
promote socio-economic development and cooperation across countries in
Asia, Europe, Africa and worldwide. Rapid land-use changes and
infrastructure developments driven by the BRI program are expected in
the coming decades. These anthropogenic effects are likely to exaggerate
the process of de-vegetation, deforestation, accelerating
desertification, which is one of the major threats to the BRI region.
This manuscript studied the desertification facts (i.e. spatiotemporal
pattern, impacts and impacting factors) and investigated key aspects for
desertification control (i.e. mitigation and evaluation methods) in the
BRI countries via an extensive review of literature. We found that
desertification has been prevalent in the BRI countries, predominantly
in C Asia, but quantitative assessment of desertification is yet fully
understood. This review illustrated that desertification was driven by
climatic dryness and mis-land-use/management activities, but their
relative importance has yet been (quantitatively) assessed along the BRI
countries. Given the negative impacts of desertification, these BRI
countries have ratified the UN Convention to Combat Desertification
(UNCCD) to reduce negative impacts. The implementation of
desertification mitigation programmes are currently still lacking. We
argued that desertification is usually evaluated via four type of
approaches, including quantitative approaches, indirect detection,
direct observation and biophysical measurement (e.g. vegetation growth).
Future research should be applied by considering the research scope and
data availability. Overall, we conclude that BRI countries should carry
out transboundary control on desertification. Otherwise, this issue is
likely to extend further imminent developments under the foremost BRI
program.