22/03/2021

(AU) Australia's Lesser-Known Ecosystems Are Heading For Collapse. Here's What We Stand To Lose

ABC Science - Nick Kilvert

Australia's arid zones are harsh, but home to some of our most iconic species. ABC: Caddie Brain

A damning report has found several Australian ecosystems are so degraded, they are heading toward collapse if we do not intervene.

Of the 20 systems studied by a group of scientists, 19 showed evidence of collapse in some areas and required "urgent action" to prevent them from undergoing total collapse.

Ecosystem collapse is what happens when a system is so fundamentally altered that it completely reorders, often resulting in a less diverse group of plants and animals and interactions between them than before.

Among those identified in the report in Global Change Biology were some very well-known ecosystems — the Great Barrier Reef, the Murray-Darling Basin, Ningaloo Reef and Far North Queensland's tropical rainforests.

But then there were the less well-known habitats like the Georgina gidgee woodlands, the western central arid zones, and the Gulf of Carpentaria mangrove forests.

So, what are some of these less-well known and arguably less glamorous Australian ecosystems at risk, and why should their decline concern us all?

Gulf of Carpentaria mangrove forests

Mangroves in the Gulf of Carpentaria are vital for prawn and fish stocks. Getty Images: Elizabeth Barnes

In February 1861, doomed explorers Robert Burke and William Wills spotted the waters of the Gulf of Carpentaria.

But despite travelling more than 3,000 kilometres from Melbourne, they never made it to the coastline, thwarted just 10 kilometres from their destination by impenetrable mangrove swamps.

One hundred and sixty years later, the decline of those mangrove swamps has scientists worried.

Today, just to the north of the explorers' turnaround point, is Karumba, the site of an 80-square-kilometre mangrove dieback that surprised and baffled scientists in 2015.

Rising sea levels due to climate change are increasingly known to kill mangroves.

But the researchers were shocked when they discovered the reason why the mangroves died, said Norman Duke, a mangrove ecologist at James Cook University and one of the report's 38 authors.

It wasn't the first time a severe dieback had occurred in the Gulf — it had also happened in 1982, but had gone unnoticed.
"That's important, because 1982 and 2015 were the two most severe El Nino events on record," Dr Duke said.
"Those events, to the surprise of everyone including me, caused a drop in sea level."

El Nino events cause a breakdown in trade winds. Combined with changes in regional climatic conditions, that causes sea levels in the western Pacific, including around Australia, to drop, while they rise in the eastern Pacific.

"In the Gulf of Carpentaria and other places across northern Australia, the [sea level] drop was half a metre in 2015. That half a metre prevailed for five to six months," Dr Duke said.

"So that means that the mangroves in [the Gulf] where it doesn't rain very much didn't get water and died of thirst."

The mangrove dieback was cause by a drop in the sea level during an intense El Nino. Supplied: James Cook University

While they might have been a curse to 19th century explorers, we now know that mangroves are incredibly important.

In the Gulf of Carpentaria, they provide structure to the coastline and are the habitat for juvenile prawns that stock part of Australia's largest prawn-producing region, the northern prawn fishery.

They're also the breeding and nursery grounds for numerous fish species, including barramundi and mangrove jack, as well as mud crabs.

And they sequester what is known as blue carbon. Unlike terrestrial plants that only store carbon until they decompose or are burnt, mangrove leaves and branches are buried in sediment that locks away their carbon stores, potentially for aeons.

While the big dieback of 2015 was caused by a drop in sea levels, the longer term threat is rising sea levels, according to Dr Duke.

But because mangroves are fairly fast growing, in the Gulf they're showing signs of adapting to the trend of sea-level rise, he said.

"They're doing what they're supposed to do, which is growing or walking up the profile [while] the ones at the sea edge are dying and being washed away," he said.
"If it happens holus-bolus as it has with this massive dieback, the whole shoreline gets this widespread erosion."
Climate change models predict El Nino events to intensify, Dr Duke said.

But beyond efforts to combat climate change, the best thing we can do is provide the space for mangrove systems to retreat.

In the Gulf, where the coastline is sparsely populated, that includes managing feral pests that destroy the new growth, Dr Duke said.

"The best way we can help is to contain the pigs and the fires and threats to mangrove retreat."

The Georgina gidgee woodlands

The surrounding yellow grassland has been burnt out, with the unburnt gidgee providing refuge for fleeing wildlife. Supplied: Google Earth

From the air, they look like the skin of a reptile or the bark of a tree. From ground level, they're endless rows of sand dunes, the gullies in between covered in low-growing, scrubby trees.

The Georgina gidgee woodlands are scattered across a vast, almost circular expanse of the south-eastern Northern Territory, into western Queensland and northern South Australia.

The Georgina gidgee woodlands have a widespread distribution in the centre of Australia. Supplied: Glenda Wardle

Defined by the dominance of the gidgee tree — Acacia georginae — at a glance the woodlands appear arid and as good as lifeless.

But dig a little deeper and they're not only diverse, but play an extremely important role in the central Australian ecosystem, according to ecology and evolution expert Glenda Wardle from the University of Sydney, who also contributed to the report.

"There are 81 bird species that use these woodlands. Some use it for nesting and others use it to travel through the landscape," Professor Wardle said.

"And there are a range of mammals and reptiles as well."

Gidgee trees tend to grow where water pools after rare rain events. Supplied: Mark Lithgow 

The gidgee is a slow-growing, extremely hard-timbered tree that tends to dominate in the depressions between hills where water pools after rare rain events.

Partly because the timber is so hard, it doesn't usually burn during the region's periodic grass fires, Professor Wardle said.

Instead, when fires sweep the area, the gidgee provides shelter for animals like red kangaroos, small marsupials, native rodents and bats.

"What makes them special is that they're refuges post fire and post drought," she said.

"Fires over time are recurring [about] every 26 years. During those fires, the areas of the Georgina gidgee woodlands don't burn so easily and they act as refuges for species — this is where fauna is retreating to."

But the woodlands are under threat from climate change, pests and overgrazing.

Pests including camels are doing a lot of harm to the Georgina gidgee woodlands. Supplied: Glenda Wardle

Climate change forecasts predict fires to burn hotter due to longer, more intense dry periods and severe fire conditions, and this is exacerbated by the invasive buffel grass.

Buffel grass is favoured by graziers, but creates a higher fuel load beneath the gidgee that can result in hotter burns.

The fear is that the gidgee itself will burn, leaving wildlife with nowhere to go, according to Professor Wardle.

"[We need] to be making action on climate mitigation in Australia … without that, everything else will just be fiddling at the edges," she said.

But alongside climate mitigation, she said efforts to preserve the Georgina gidgee woodlands need to focus on getting camel numbers down and managing stock in sensitive areas.

"Underneath the gidgee itself, cows remove all vegetation, all habitat, and all other species, so the adult trees can't [reproduce]," Professor Wardle said.

"The other thing is camels — camels browse on these trees."

Without intervention, researchers like Professor Wardle predict that the system will "cascade into desertification".

Western central arid zones

The western central arid zones encompass a vast and environmentally diverse area. Getty Images: Ted Mead

The western central arid zones cover more than 40 per cent of Australia, stretching from the central Western Australian coastline, across to western Queensland and New South Wales, down to the Great Australian Bight and up into the central Northern Territory.

The vast area is characterised by low and episodic rainfall, flat terrain and vegetation spanning low, open woodlands and shrublands, to grasslands, rangelands and desert dunes.

Perhaps because of its seemingly endless plains, the rare changes in elevation in the arid zone — Uluru, Munga-Thirri-Simpson Desert, Tjoritja-West Macdonnell Ranges, and Kati Thanda-Lake Eyre — are some of our most revered landmarks.

The western central arid zones are home to some of our most iconic species, including bilbies. Supplied: Brad Leue, Australian Wildlife Conservancy

Despite the harsh environment, the western central arid zones are home to some of our most iconic species — bilbies, thorny devils, inland taipans and dunnarts to name a few.

But again, researchers have warned that the bioregion is facing collapse and climate change is the greatest existential threat, according to Suzanne Prober, a senior research scientist with the CSIRO and report co-author.
"What is extraordinary is when you go out and you see the mulga dying. Mulga is one of the toughest trees in Australia, it just keeps on keeping on," Dr Prober said.
"It's not dying due to fire, it's just the leaves are dead. I've been getting other reports from all over the place. There are patches of mulga dying in the Gibson Desert and that's way out of the range of livestock grazing."

Buffel grass changes the fire regime and is wiping out mulga trees, researchers say. Supplied: Suzanne Prober

Like the Georgina gidgee woodlands, a combination of climate change, buffel grass and other invasive pests is also changing the fire regime.

"The Great Victoria Desert supports these marble gums all over the desert, but there are just huge landscapes where the fires are killing the trees," Dr Prober said.

But it's not too late to make changes that can help turn things around, according to wildlife ecology expert and report co-author Euan Ritchie from Deakin University.

"We're trying to highlight that yes, things are grim, but it isn't too late. Yes, we can act," Professor Ritchie said.

A "major biological control program" to stop the spread of buffel grass, protection of freshwater refuges from weeds and livestock, cool-burning fire management, and the control of pests like feral cats and camels can all ease the pressure these systems are facing.

According to researchers like Professor Wardle, if we don't intervene to help these systems recover, we'll find out they're not just iconic, but they're quite literally holding the country together.

"If the degradation [we reported] goes to the worst extent, the 2009 dust storm that swept across Australia is the starting point," she said.

"That's when we'll remember we live in a red country."

Links

(AU) Extinction Rebellion Grandparents Fighting For The Future Of Their Grandchildren

ABC NewsClaire Moodie

These Extinction Rebellion members say they're just grandparents raising awareness of the growing threat from climate change. ABC News: Claire Moodie

They have been labelled "ferals", "anarchists" and "dole bludgers" but older members of the  activist movement, Extinction Rebellion, say they are just ordinary people moving out of their comfort zone to protect their grandchildren from the devastating impacts of climate change.

"I don't have a choice," says Heath Greville, a 67-year-old grandmother of three who works at the University of Western Australia as a researcher in public health.

"If you see your loved ones coming into harm, you step up to protect them.
"When you understand the severity of what we are looking at here … you can't unsee the science."
Extinction Rebellion is planning to disrupt "business as usual" in cities across the country from Monday.

'People do get angry'

Ms Greville is preparing for the prospect of being arrested again when she joins other Extinction Rebellion grandparents at the Perth rally.  

It's not something she takes lightly.  She gets nervous, worrying about the safety of others, rather than herself.

Heath Greville says she joined Extinction Rebellion after exhausting all other options to bring the Government's attention to the climate crisis. ABC News: Claire Moodie


She has been arrested twice before at previous rallies for refusing to move on.

 But she sees it as a last resort.

"People do get angry," she said.

"It takes courage to say I'm sorry, I'm disrupting your day but this is how bad things are.

"The normal routes available to a citizen like going to see an MP or signing a petition or going on a peaceful march or writing a letter are not working.

"So our theory of change in Extinction Rebellion is we have to engage in civil disobedience and what that means is breaking the law."

Many members of the group say they are prepared to be arrested at the rallies. Supplied

Asked what kind of example that sets for her grandchildren — who were all born within the last year — Ms Greville gives a considered response.
"I want to be able to stand up to my grandchildren and say 'I did the best I could'."
Ms Greville points to a recent Climate Health WA report that exposes the effect climate change is already having and how much worse the situation could get this century.

The report says extreme temperatures are likely to increase so much that the number of days over 40 degrees Celsius in Perth is expected to increase by 150 per cent by late this century.

In Broome, days with temperatures above 35C could be experienced for around a third of the year in the same timeframe.

The bushfire season is expected to become even more extreme and longer, having already lengthened from the traditional period of December to February, to November through to May.

The report points out that sea levels along the west coast of Australia have been rising at double the global average.

Even Perth's Elizabeth Quay, on the Swan River, which was only opened five years ago, could be underwater by early next century, according to the inquiry's report.

Elizabeth Quay is under threat from climate change according to a new report. ABC News: Jessica Warriner

The document then goes on to detail the impact all this is likely to have on human health, increasing everything from deaths from bushfires to the transmission of mosquito-borne diseases.

For the grandparents of Extinction Rebellion the reality of climate change is devastating.

Some objected to being referred to in WA's recent election campaign as "anarchists" and "professional protesters".

The group comprises professionals and retirees from all walks of life, everything from social workers and teachers to psychologists and veterinary surgeons.

Rae Price, a retired librarian, was among five grandparents who super-glued their hands to the windows of Chevron's Perth headquarters last year, in protest against the company's carbon emissions.

Rae Price was among a group of grandparents who glued their hands to the windows at Chevron's headquarters in Perth during a protest. Supplied: @milestweediephotography

She has been arrested three times so far and paid a total of $1,000 in fines, trying to fight for action to protect the future for her two grand-daughters, aged six and 12.

"It's quite unforgivable that we are not caring for our future generations," Ms Price said.

"We have 10 years to act and no-one is acting."

That view is dismissed by the federal Minister for Energy and Emissions Reduction, Angus Taylor.

Australia performing strongly: Emissions Reduction Minister

Mr Taylor has repeatedly said that Australia is on track to meet and beat its 2030 climate target of reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 26 to 28 per cent below 2005 levels.

"Look, we're 19 per cent down on our 2005 levels, on the way to our target of 26 per cent for 2030," he said.

Angus Taylor has defended the federal government's environmental policies.

"It's overall emissions in the economy that counts. Five per cent reduction in the last four months in the electricity grid for instance.

"We are seeing very strong performance in Australia."

Target claims 'government propaganda'

But Bill Hare, a climate scientist with 30 years' experience in the field, said the federal government's claims Australia would meet and beat its target were "government propaganda".

"It's not supported by the underlying analysis in the government's own projections," he said.

Climate scientist Bill Hare says Australia’s climate policy is at a standstill. ABC News: Claire Moodie

"The government likes to say that we are indeed reducing emissions, but if you look at the underlying trend in emissions from the burning of coal, oil and gas and industrial activities, they are still heading upwards, actually."

Mr Hare, who is also the founder of non-profit climate science and policy centre Climate Analytics, said 2021 was a big year for climate change, with an international summit planned for Glasgow at the end of the year.

"Australia's level of ambition is really low, compared to other countries, other comparable countries," he said.

"Twenty-six to 28 per cent reduction by 2030 … others are making much deeper reductions.

The protesters say many of the usual mechanisms to get a message across to governments are not working. Supplied

"We would need to be getting emissions down to 60 to 70 per cent below 2005 levels by 2030."

Mr Hare said that target was manageable, and warned that Australia's economy would fall behind if it did not act, as the world moved towards net-zero emissions by mid century.

'We do have power in the people'

For Julie Marsh, a parent of two adult sons from Denmark in WA's Great Southern region, the need to address climate change is so urgent that she is driving up to Perth for this week's rally, preparing to be arrested and charged for the first time in her life.

"I think I may have had a parking ticket at some point," she said.

"But we've been a very compliant family.

Julie Marsh (far left) of Denmark is preparing to be arrested and charged for the first time in her life as part of an Extinction Rebellion protest. Supplied

"So, I think I really do want to show that we do have power in the people.

"That we can make change.

"It's about sustaining our effort to the point where we can't be ignored."

With protests expected across Perth, Melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane from Monday, Mr Taylor warned Extinction Rebellion to keep the demonstrations peaceful.

"Protest is an important right in Australia," he said.

"But, there is no place for intimidation and harassment in our community."

Extinction Rebellion a 'peaceful movement'

Heath Greville said Extinction Rebellion was a peaceful movement, with members receiving training in "non-violent direct-action training".

"I think we're very misunderstood," she said.

"We are genuinely sorry to have to disrupt people's day, but we say the disruption that our kids and our grandkids are going to experience is going to be so much worse."

The WA rallies come as the re-elected Labor state government appoints a new Environment Minister, Amber Jade Sanderson, who has also been given the new Climate Action portfolio.

Links

‘Our Biggest Challenge? Lack Of Imagination’: The Scientists Turning The Desert Green

The Guardian

In China, scientists have turned vast swathes of arid land into a lush oasis. Now a team of maverick engineers want to do the same to the Sinai

The Loess plateau, in China, in 2007, left, and transformed into green valleys and productive farmland in 2019.

Flying into Egypt in early February to make the most important presentation of his life, Ties van der Hoeven prepared by listening to the podcast 13 Minutes To The Moon – the story of how Nasa accomplished the lunar landings. The mission he was discussing with the Egyptian government was more earthbound in nature, but every bit as ambitious. It could even represent a giant leap for mankind.

Van der Hoeven is a co-founder of the Weather Makers, a Dutch firm of “holistic engineers” with a plan to regreen the Sinai peninsula – the small triangle of land that connects Egypt to Asia. Within a couple of decades, the Weather Makers believe, the Sinai could be transformed from a hot, dry, barren desert into a green haven teeming with life: forests, wetlands, farming land, wild flora and fauna. A regreened Sinai would alter local weather patterns and even change the direction of the winds, bringing more rain, the Weather Makers believe – hence their name.

“If anybody doubts that the Sinai can be regreened,” Van der Hoeven told the Egyptian delegates, an assortment of academics, representatives of ministers and military top brass, “then you have to understand that landing on the moon was once thought unrealistic. They didn’t lay out a full, detailed roadmap when they started, but they had the vision. And step by step they made it happen.”

Van der Hoeven is nothing if not persuasive. Voluble, energetic and down-to-earth, the 40-year-old engineer’s train of thought runs through disciplines from morphology to esoteric mysticism, often threatening to jump the tracks. But he is keenly focused on the future. “This world is ready for regenerative change,” he says. “It’s going to be a complete change of our behaviour as a species in the longer term. It is going to be a step as big as fire was for humanity.”
It became clear we had a massive opportunity. It wasn’t the solution to one problem; it was the solution to all the problems
It sounds impossibly far-fetched, but not only is the Weather Makers’ plan perfectly feasible, they insist, it is precisely the type of project humanity should be getting its head around right now. In recent years, discussion about the climate crisis has predominantly focused on fossil fuels and greenhouse gases; now, we’re coming to realise that the other side of that coin is protecting and replenishing the natural world.

There is no better mechanism for removing carbon dioxide from the atmosphere than nature, but in the past 5,000 years, human activity has reduced the Earth’s total biomass by an estimated 50%, and destroyed or degraded 70% of the world’s forests. As UN secretary general António Guterres put it last year: “Human activities are at the root of our descent toward chaos. But that means human action can help to solve it.”

The Weather Makers know this very well: their origins are in dredging, one of the heaviest industries there is. Over the past few centuries, dredging has helped humans alter the face of the planet on ever-greater scales. Trained as a morphological engineer, Van der Hoeven has spent the past decade in the industry, working on projects across the world, including the artificial islands of Dubai, whose creation involved large-scale dredging and land reclamation.

He got sucked into the expat lifestyle there, he admits: drinking, eating, partying, “I lost a little bit of my soul.” Returning to the Netherlands in 2008, he began to reexamine his own profession: “What I could see is that the dredging industry had so much potential; we were just misusing it.”

Working for the Belgian company Deme, he devised a new method of dredging that was both more eco-friendly and more efficient. He used inexpensive sensors to model maritime conditions in real time – waves, currents, tides – so as to determine more precisely where and when it was safe to work. Trialling the system, he won over sceptical colleagues by living on the vessel with them, even cooking meals. Head office was also convinced when his technique saved a small fortune.

In January 2016, Van der Hoeven was contacted by Deme’s Egyptian representative, Malik Boukebbous, who had been asked by the Egyptian government to look into restoring Lake Bardawil, a lagoon on the north coast of the Sinai. The lake was once 20 to 40 metres deep, but today is just a few metres deep. Dredging the lake and cutting channels to allow more water in from the Mediterranean would make it deeper, cooler and less salty – all of which would boost fish stocks.

But Van der Hoeven did not want to stop there. “If I feel I’m on the right track, it’s difficult for people to distract me,” he says. He began looking at the Sinai peninsula in more detail: its history, weather patterns, geology, tides, plant and animal life, even religious texts. He took himself off other projects and spent long hours in his apartment surrounded by charts, maps, books, sketched diagrams. “People were afraid for me because I was forgetting myself. My friends were cooking for me.” The deeper he looked, the more potential he saw.

There is evidence that the Sinai once was green – as recently as 4,500 to 8,000 years ago. Cave paintings found there depict trees and plants. Records in the 1,500-year-old Saint Catherine’s monastery, near Mount Sinai, tally harvests of wood. Satellite images reveal a network of rivers flowing from the mountains in the south towards the Mediterranean.

The Sinai peninsula today, and how it could look after regreening. Composite: The Weather Makers

What turned the Sinai into a desert was, most likely, human activity. Wherever they settle, humans tend to chop down trees and clear land. This loss of vegetation affects the land’s ability to retain moisture. Grazing animals trample and consume plants when they try to grow back. The soil loses its structure and is washed away – hence the silt in Lake Bardawil.

Van der Hoeven calculated the lake contained about 2.5bn cubic metres of silt. If one were to restore the Sinai, this vast reserve of nutrient-rich material was exactly what would be needed. “It became clear we had a massive opportunity,” he says. “It wasn’t the solution to a single problem; it was the solution to all the problems.”

By this stage, Van der Hoeven and Deme agreed that he would be best off working as a separate entity, so in 2017 he founded the Weather Makers with two friends: Gijs Bosman and Maddie Akkermans. Both appear to be steadying influences. Bosman, a project manager at Dutch engineering firm Royal HaskoningDHV and a friend since student days, had the ability to translate Van der Hoeven’s grand vision into actionable technical detail.

Akkermans has a background in finance and economics. “Ties said, ‘I’m too chaotic. So I can’t do this alone,’” she says. “Having someone like me who could tell him the truth and keep him on track gave him the confidence to start a company.”

They consulted with experts across disciplines, in particular a handful of veterans who have been ploughing the eco-restoration furrow for decades. Van der Hoeven calls them his “Jedi”. The first of these is John D Liu, a Chinese-American ecologist with a background in broadcasting. Restoring a landscape as large and as degraded as the Sinai sounds like science fiction, but it has been done before.

While Van der Hoeven was immersed in his research, a friend implored him to watch a documentary called Green Gold, which Liu had made for Dutch television in 2012. It chronicles the story of the Loess plateau, an area of northern China almost the size of France. In 1994, Liu, who was working as a television journalist in Beijing, was asked by the World Bank to film the start of an ambitious restoration project, led by a pioneering Chinese scientist, Li Rui.

At that time, the Loess plateau was much like the Sinai: a dry, barren, heavily eroded landscape. The soil was washing away and silting up the Yellow river. Farmers could barely grow any crops. The plan to restore it was huge in scale but relatively low tech: planting trees on the hilltops; terracing the steep slopes (by hand); adding organic material to the soil; controlling grazing animals; retaining water.

The transformation has been astonishing. Within 20 years, the deserts of the Loess plateau became green valleys and productive farmland, as Green Gold documents. “I watched it 35 times in a row,” says Van der Hoeven. “Seeing that, I thought, ‘Let’s go for it!’”

Ties van der Hoeven: ‘If we want to do something about global warming, we have to do something about deserts.’ Photograph: Judith Jockel/The Guardian
The Loess plateau project was also a turning point for Liu, he says – away from broadcasting and towards ecosystem restoration: “You start to see that everything is connected. It’s almost like you’re in the Matrix.”

Despite his Jedi status, 68-year-old Liu is easygoing and conversational, more midwestern ex-hippy than cryptic Zen master. Since 2009, he has been an ambassador for Commonland, a Dutch nonprofit, and an adviser to Ecosystem Restoration Camps – a global network of hands-on, volunteer communities.

After watching Green Gold, the Weather Makers practically burst into Commonland’s Amsterdam headquarters to share their plans. “They were not going to be denied!” Liu recalls. “I said, ‘We have to work with these people, because this is the most audacious thesis I’ve ever seen.’”

Liu brought Van der Hoeven to China to see the Loess plateau first-hand. “To be in a place that had been essentially a desert where now it’s raining cats and dogs, and it’s not flooding, because it’s being infiltrated and retained in the system – it was all just so impressive to him.”

Through Liu, Van der Hoeven met another Jedi: Prof Millán Millán, a Spanish meteorologist. In the 1990s, Millán began investigating the disappearance of summer storms in eastern Spain for the European commission. “What I found is that the loss is directly linked to the building up of coastal areas,” he says.

Rainfall in the region comes almost entirely from Mediterranean sea breezes. However, the breeze alone doesn’t carry enough water vapour to create a storm inland; it needs to pick up extra moisture, which it used to do from the marshes and wetlands along the coast.

Over the past two centuries, however, these wetlands have been built on or converted to farming land. No additional moisture; no more storms. “Once you take too much vegetation out, it leads to desertification very quickly,” says Millán.

Such changes do not just affect the weather at a local level, Millán discovered: “The water vapour that doesn’t precipitate over the mountains goes back to the Mediterranean and accumulates in layers for about four or five days, and then it goes somewhere else: central Europe.” In other words, building on the Spanish coast was creating floods in Germany.

Millán’s findings have gone largely unheeded by the European commission, he says. Now 79 and retired, he speaks with the gentle weariness of a long-ignored expert: “My criticism to them was: the old township barber would pull your teeth with pliers. It hurt, but it was effective. You’re still using those procedures, but you could save all your teeth.”

Millán’s research and Liu’s experience in the Loess plateau arrived at essentially the same conclusion. Chop down the trees, destroy the ecosystem, and the rains disappear; restore the ecosystem, make a wetter landscape, and the rains come back. Millán distilled his work down to a simple maxim: “Water begets water, soil is the womb, vegetation is the midwife.”
Desertification and climate change is happening so fast, we need action on the ground. Enough seminars, talks, talks, talks
Regreening the Sinai is to some extent a question of restarting that “water begets water” feedback loop. After restoring Lake Bardawil, the second phase is to expand and restore the wetlands around it so as to evaporate more moisture and increase biodiversity. The Sinai coast is already a major global crossing point for migratory birds; restored wetlands would encourage more birds, which would add fertility and new plant species.

When it comes to restoring inland areas of the Sinai, there is another challenge: fresh water. This is where another Jedi came into play: John Todd, a mild-mannered marine biologist and a pioneer in ecological design.

In the 1970s, frustrated by the narrowness of academia, Todd established the New Alchemy Institute, an alternative research community in Massachusetts dedicated to sustainable living. One of his innovations was the “eco machine” – a low-tech installation consisting of clear-sided water barrels covered by a greenhouse.

“An eco machine is basically a living technology,” Todd explains. The principle is that water flows from one barrel to the next, and each barrel contains a mini ecosystem: algae, plants, bacteria, fungi, worms, insects, fish; like a series of manmade ponds. As the water flows, it becomes cleaner and cleaner.

“You could design one that would treat toxic waste or sewage, or you could design one to grow food. They are solar-driven, and have within them a very large amount of biodiversity – in a sense, they reflect the aggregate experience of life on Earth over the last 3.5bn years.” In the Sinai, eco machines would be used to grow plants and to produce fresh water.

Last autumn, the Weather Makers built their own eco machine on a pig farm on the outskirts of the Dutch city of s’-Hertogenbosch, where they are based. For the first step in a plan to change the world, it is not exactly prepossessing. It looks like a standard agricultural polytunnel.

On a cold, drizzly day, Weather Maker Pieter van Hout gives me a virtual tour. Inside the greenhouse are six clear-sided barrels filled with water of various shades of green and brown. In some of the tanks is leaf litter and dead plant material.

Van Hout points out the brown algae growing on the sides: phytoplankton, the basis of the food web, which feeds life further up the chain: insects, snails and, in one tank, fish (in the Sinai these would be edible tilapia).

The Weather Makers, from left, in their eco machine: Eduardo Vias Torres, Pieter van Hout, Maarten Lanters, Ties van der Hoeven, Maddie Akkermans, Gijs Bosman, Mohammed Nawlo. Photograph: Judith Jockel/The Guardian

Some water evaporates from the barrels and condenses on the inside skin of the greenhouse, where it is collected by a system of gutters. Even on a cold day in the Netherlands, there is a constant trickle into a container on the ground.

In the heat of the Sinai, the cycle would run much faster, says Van Hout. The water feeding the eco machine would be salt water, but the water that condenses inside would be fresh water, which can then be used to irrigate plants. If the structure is designed correctly, one would only need to drum on the outside to create an artificial “rain” inside.

When the plants and the soil inside the greenhouse reach a certain maturity, they become self-sustaining. The greenhouse can then be removed and the process repeated in a different spot. “The idea is that you may have 100 of these structures,” says John Todd. “And they’re spending five years in one site and then they’re moved, so these little ecologies are left behind.”

In the Sinai, the sediment from Lake Bardawil would be pumped up to the hills, 50km inland, where it would then trickle back down through a network of eco machines. The saltiness of the sediment is actually an asset, says Van Hout, in that it has preserved all the nutrients. Flushing them through the eco machines will “reactivate” them.

Around the water tanks, they are now testing to see which salt-tolerant plant species, or halophytes, grow best. Van Hout proudly points out a stack of white plastic tubs containing silt freshly scooped from the bottom of Lake Bardawil. “This is what ecosystem restoration looks like in real life,” he laughs, “buckets of very expensive mud.”

Estimates of how much difference a regreened Sinai could make are hard to quantify. In terms of carbon sequestration, it would doubtless be “billions of tons”, says Van der Hoeven. But such metrics are not always helpful: if you convert atmospheric carbon into, say, phytoplankton, what happens when a fish eats that phytoplankton? Or when a bigger fish eats that fish?
There are certain points in this world where, if we accumulate our joint energy, we can make a big difference
Another useful measure could be global temperature. In addition to sequestering carbon, green areas also help cool the planet. Deserts are heat producers, reflecting around 60% to 70% of the solar energy that falls on them straight back into the atmosphere. In areas covered by vegetation, much of that solar energy is instead used in evapotranspiration: the process of condensation and evaporation by which water moves between plants and the atmosphere.

“If vegetation comes back, you increase cover, you reduce temperature, you reduce solar reflection, you start creating a stable climate,” says Van der Hoeven. “If we want to do something about global warming, we have to do something about deserts.”

At present, the hot Sinai acts as a “vacuum cleaner”, drawing moist air from the Mediterranean and funnelling it towards the Indian Ocean. A cooler Sinai would mean less of that moisture being “lost”. Instead, it would fall as rain across the Middle East and north Africa, thus boosting the entire region’s natural potential. Van der Hoeven describes the Sinai peninsula as an “acupuncture point”: “There are certain points in this world where, if we accumulate our joint energy, we can make a big difference.”

The Sinai is also an acupuncture point geopolitically, however. Post-Arab spring, the region has become a battle zone between Egyptian security forces and Islamist insurgents. There have been numerous terrorist incidents: the bombing of a Russian airliner in 2015 killed 224 people; an attack on a Sufi mosque in 2017 killed more than 300 worshippers.

Northern Sinai is currently a no-go area to outsiders, controlled by the military, and plagued by poverty, terrorism and human rights abuses. Since 2018 the military has restricted access to Lake Bardawil for local fishermen to just a few months a year, says Ahmed Salem, founder of the UK-based Sinai Foundation for Human Rights.

“There’s a lot of suffering,” he says, “because they don’t have any other way to earn money and feed their families.” A restored landscape would bring tangible benefits to locals, says Salem, but it all depends on the president, Abdel Fatah al-Sisi. “If Sisi really wants to help them [the Weather Makers], it will be OK for them because he’s like a god in Egypt. But if he doesn’t, they will fail.”

But the Sisi government seems to have recognised that ecosystem regeneration could fix many problems at once: food security, poverty, political stability, climate goals, as well as the potential for a green project of international renown. The government is close to signing contracts for the first phase of the restoration plan, which covers the dredging of Lake Bardawil. Subsequent phases may well require financial support from external bodies such as the EU.

As outsiders, the Weather Makers are aware their plan will require local support, cooperation and labour. Because of the military restrictions, none of them has visited Lake Bardawil, although they have forged links with an organic farm in southern Sinai named Habiba.

Habiba was established in 1994, by Maged El Said, a charismatic, Cairo-born tour operator who fell in love with the region. Originally it was a beach resort, but in 2007 El Said branched into organic farming, and Habiba now connects other farms, local Bedouin tribes and academic institutions.

The Weather Makers have forged links with Habiba organic farm in southern Sinai. Photograph: Courtesy of Maged El Said
El Said has some reservations about the Weather Makers’ plan: “It’s a big shiny project, but also you’re drastically changing the environment, the flora and fauna. I don’t know if there will be side-effects.”

But in terms of the larger mission, they are very much aligned: “We are all in the same boat. Desertification and climate change is happening so fast, so we need action on the ground. Enough of workshops, enough seminars, talks, talks, talks.”

On a global level, the tide is turning in the Weather Makers’ direction.

 Discussions about regreening, reforestation and rewilding have been growing in volume and urgency, boosted by high-profile advocates such as Greta Thunberg, David Attenborough and British ecologist Thomas Crowther, who made headlines in 2019 with research suggesting the climate crisis could be solved by planting 1tn trees (he later acknowledged it was not quite that simple).

This year marks the beginning of the United Nations Decade on Ecosystem Restoration, “a rallying call for the protection and revival of ecosystems around the world”. The UN hopes to restore 350m hectares of land by 2030, which could remove an additional 13 to 26 gigatons of carbon from the atmosphere.

After decades of compartmentalising environmental issues and missing its own targets, the UN, too, has come to realise that the only viable solution is to do it all at once. It particularly wants to rally younger people to the cause; its social media campaigns carry a “generation restoration” hashtag. “Ecosystem restoration is not a technical challenge; it’s a social challenge,” says Tim Christophersen, head of the Nature for Climate branch at the UN Environment Programme.

Nations and corporations are also making ever more ambitious commitments to regreening, even if they are struggling to live up to them. The UK, for example, plans to create 30,000 hectares of woodland a year by 2025. India has pledged to restore 26m hectares of degraded land by 2030. Africa’s Great Green Wall, “the world’s largest ecosystem restoration project”, aims to plant an 8,000km line of trees across the Sahara Desert, from Senegal to Djibouti (14 years on, it is only around 15% complete).

Meanwhile, green companies are taking root, such as Ecosia, the Berlin-based search engine, which to date has planted more than 120m trees around the world.

“The main challenge,” Christophersen says, “is the lack of human imagination; our inability to see a different future because we’re staring down this dystopian path of pandemic, climate change, biodiversity loss. But the collective awareness that we are in this together is a huge opportunity.

People don’t have a problem imagining what a four-lane highway would look like. But to imagine a restored landscape of over a million hectares – nobody knows what that would look like because it hasn’t really been done before.”

Van der Hoeven would agree. He cites Yuval Noah Hariri’s book Sapiens, which argues that humans prevailed because of our ability to share information, ideas, stories: “We were able to believe in a myth – in something which was not there yet.”

Regreening the Sinai is presently little more than a myth, just as the Apollo missions once were; but it now exists in the imagination, as a signpost for the future we aspire to. The more it is shared, the more likely it is to happen.

It could come to be a turning point – an acupuncture point: “We’re not going to change humanity by saying, ‘Everything has to be less,’” says Van der Hoeven. “No, we have to do more of the good things. Why don’t we come together and do something in a positive way?”

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