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**Record-breaking World Environment Day spotlights land restoration, desertification, and drought resilience** – With a focus on restoring degraded lands, combatting desertification, and building drought resilience, countries around the world came together today to mark World Environment Day 2024, under the rallying call ‘Our Land.
Our Future.
We are #GenerationRestoration’.
On the biggest calendar moment for environmental action, this marked the second time in more than 50 years that World Environment Day has been hosted in the West Asia region.
Faced with more severe and prolonged droughts, sandstorms, and rising temperatures, the region is seeing deserts expand, freshwater sources evaporate, and land erode.
World Environment Day 2024 registered a record-breaking number of **3,657 events** and counting at the time of launch, held by governments, cities, civil society, universities and schools, and businesses spanning the globe.
Activities ranged from high-level events in Riyadh to week-long festivities in South America, from zoo celebrations in Europe and Asia to Africa, from posters dotting transport hubs to the largest mural in North America, and from film screenings to video messages.
Tens of millions of people joined the online global conversation, with #WorldEnvironmentDay trending above blockbuster movies and global politics on social media, amplifying the global rally to restore the land that humanity and countless other species depend on for survival.
“Today, we’re pushing planetary boundaries to the brink – shattering global temperature records and reaping the whirlwind,” said António Guterres, the UN Secretary-General, in a speech on climate action at the American Museum of Natural History in New York.
“And it’s a travesty of climate justice that those least responsible for the crisis are hardest hit: the poorest people; the most vulnerable countries; Indigenous Peoples; women and girls,” he added.
Up to **40%** of the world’s land is already degraded, directly affecting half of humanity, and an estimated **3.
2 billion people** worldwide are negatively impacted by desertification.
By 2050, more than **75%** of the world’s population is expected to be affected by droughts.
This World Environment Day aims to support accelerated progress on global commitments, which include protecting **30%** of land and sea for nature and restoring **30%** of the planet’s degraded ecosystems.
While countries have promised to restore **one billion hectares** of land by 2030, current trends suggest **1.
5 billion hectares** would need to be restored to meet the 2030 goals.
Saudi Arabia has announced environmental sustainability goals to help tackle the challenges of drought, desertification, and land degradation, including a pledge to restore land through the Saudi Green Initiative and the Middle East Green Initiative.
On World Environment Day, the government celebrated its land restoration efforts and announced greater support and funding for private and philanthropic organizations working on environmental issues.
Further, Saudi Arabia confirmed the country is on track to meet the global land degradation neutrality target by 2030.
“In the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, great efforts have been made to restore lands and limit degradation, including with the Saudi Green Initiative and the Middle East Green Initiative, but also to promote regional cooperation to reduce land degradation, conserve vegetation, enhance biodiversity, and food security,” said Abdulrahman Abdulmohsen Al-Fadley, Saudi Minister for Environment, Water, and Agriculture.
“The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia’s efforts to improve vegetation cover and combat desertification through the Saudi Green Initiative and national strategy will enable the country to reach its land degradation neutrality goal by 2030,” he added.
Addressing government officials and industry leaders at the Riyadh event, UNEP Executive Director Inger Andersen stressed the need for urgent action to make the goals a reality by 2030.
“Billions across the world are facing food insecurity, crippling droughts, and livelihoods are under threat.
That is why on World Environment Day we’re asking the world to join the global movement to restore our lands, increase drought resilience, and combat desertification,” said Executive Director Andersen.
“Restoration is the natural solution to help address the triple planetary crisis, deliver new jobs, lower poverty, and build resilience to extreme weather.
Land is life – and we must protect it,” she added.
On World Environment Day, cities stretching from Africa to Latin America joined UNEP’s efforts.
Collectively, these urban areas – representing **45 million inhabitants, 2.
1 million hectares of land, and 600 kilometers of waterways** – are now seeking to replicate and scale up ecosystem restoration initiatives.
Championing the movement to move the world onto a sustainable and resilient path and joining forces to protect people and the planet, World Environment Day 2024 builds momentum for climate action by rallying support for vital ecosystems restoration work.
Saudi Arabia has partnered with the Group of 20 nations and the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) on the initiative, which aims to cut degradation by **50%** by 2040.
In December, the country will host the sixteenth session of the Conference of the Parties (COP16) of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD).
This will be the first time the region has hosted this meeting, which is widely seen as a pivotal moment in the global effort to end land degradation.
World Environment Day on **5 June** is one of the biggest international days for the environment.
Led by UNEP and held annually since 1973, the event has grown to be the largest global platform for environmental outreach, with millions of people from across the world engaging to protect the planet.
UNEP is the leading global voice on the environment.
It provides leadership and encourages partnership in caring for the environment by inspiring, informing, and enabling nations and peoples to improve their quality of life without compromising that of future generations.