Axi célèbre d’importantes victoires aux Global Business and Finance Magazine Awards 2025

SYDNEY, 13 août 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Axi, acteur majeur des services financiers à l’échelle mondiale, a été distingué par plusieurs prix prestigieux lors des Global Business and Finance Magazine Awards 2025*, confirmant son influence croissante à l’international et son engagement constant envers l’excellence.

Axi s’est fièrement vu décerner les prix suivants :

Best Financial Institution 2025 – UK (Meilleure institution financière 2025 – Royaume–Uni)

Best Financial Institution 2025 – LATAM (Meilleure institution financière 2025 – Amérique latine)

Best Financial Institution 2025 – Middle East (Meilleure institution financière 2025 – Moyen–Orient)

Ces récompenses témoignent de la détermination d’Axi à promouvoir l’inclusion financière et à développer des solutions intelligentes, centrées sur le client, sur l’ensemble des marchés mondiaux. Au cœur de ce succès se trouve Axi Select, le programme phare d’allocation de capital de l’entreprise, qui fournit aux traders émergents les outils et le financement nécessaires pour accélérer leur carrière. Axi Select a permis à des milliers de traders dans le monde d’accéder à un soutien de niveau institutionnel, transformant leur potentiel en véritable performance.

L’offre de produits et services de trading d’Axi – allant des outils d’analyse avancés et plateformes multi–actifs fluides, aux solutions de comptes personnalisées pour clients particuliers, professionnels et institutionnels – a contribué à bâtir une communauté mondiale de trading plus solide et inclusive. Son impact est particulièrement visible au Royaume–Uni, en Amérique latine et au Moyen–Orient, où Axi a considérablement renforcé ses services et offres adaptés aux spécificités locales.

Hannah Hill, responsable de la marque et des partenariats chez Axi, a fait part de ses réflexions sur ce succès :

« Chez Axi, nous pensons que l’excellence est plus qu’un objectif, c’est un engagement quotidien envers nos clients, nos collaborateurs et les principes qui guident notre progression. Être reconnu dans des régions aussi diverses rappelle que la confiance, l’innovation et l’intégrité résonnent partout dans le monde lorsqu’elles imprègnent chacune de vos actions. »

À propos d’Axi

Axi est une société internationale de trading de devises et de CFD en ligne et compte des milliers de clients répartis dans plus de 100 pays à travers le monde. Axi propose des CFD exposés à plusieurs classes d’actifs, notamment le Forex, les actions, l’or, le pétrole, le café et bien d’autres encore.

Pour tout complément d’information ou pour obtenir des commentaires supplémentaires de la part d’Axi, veuillez nous contacter à l’adresse suivante : [email protected]

Le programme Axi est réservé aux clients d’AxiTrader Limited. Les CFD sont des instruments complexes et comportent un risque élevé de perte en capital. Dans le cadre relationnel qui nous lie, nous assumons le rôle de principale contrepartie à toutes vos positions. Ce contenu peut ne pas être disponible dans votre région. Pour obtenir de plus amples informations, veuillez consulter nos conditions générales.

* Hors frais de trading standard et dépôt minimum.

** Octroyé au groupe d’entreprises Axi.


GLOBENEWSWIRE (Distribution ID 1001122667)

Axi comemora grandes vitórias no Global Business and Finance Magazine Awards de 2025

SYDNEY, Aug. 13, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — A Axi, uma força líder no segmento de serviços financeiros globais, foi homenageada com vários prêmios de prestígio no Global Business and Finance Magazine Awards de 2025*, destacando o seu crescente impacto global e compromisso com a excelência.

A Axi orgulhosamente recebeu as seguintes premiações:

Melhor Instituição Financeira de 2025 – Reino Unido

Melhor Instituição Financeira de 2025 – América Latina

Melhor Instituição Financeira de 2025 – Oriente Médio

Essas conquistas são uma prova da dedicação inabalável da Axi em promover a inclusão financeira e construir soluções inteligentes e centradas no cliente em mercados globais. O crescimento do Axi Select, o principal programa de alocação de capital da empresa, que oferece aos traders emergentes as ferramentas e o financiamento necessários para acelerar suas carreiras de trading, foi fundamental para esse sucesso. A Axi Select capacitou milhares de traders no mundo todo para que tenham acesso a um suporte de nível institucional, transformando potencial em desempenho.

O conjunto de produtos e serviços de negociação da Axi — que vão desde análises avançadas e plataformas multiativos integradas até soluções de contas personalizadas para clientes de varejo, profissionais e institucionais — ajudou a construir uma comunidade global de trading mais forte e inclusiva. Seu impacto foi especialmente evidente no Reino Unido, na América Latina e no Oriente Médio, regiões em que a Axi expandiu significativamente o seu leque de ofertas localizadas e serviços de suporte.

A líder de estratégia de marca e patrocínios da Axi, Hannah Hill, compartilhou suas considerações sobre a conquista:

“Na Axi, acreditamos que a excelência não é um destino, mas um compromisso diário com nossos clientes, nosso pessoal e os princípios que impulsionam o nosso progresso. Ser reconhecido em regiões tão diversas é um lembrete poderoso de que confiança, inovação e integridade ressoam globalmente quando são incorporadas a tudo o que você faz.”

Sobre a Axi

A Axi é uma empresa global de trading on–line de FX e CFD e possui milhares de clientes em mais de 100 países. Além disso, a Axi oferece CFDs para várias classes de ativos, incluindo forex, ações, ouro, petróleo, café e muito mais.

Para obter mais informações ou comentários adicionais da Axi, entre em contato enviando um e–mail para: [email protected]

O programa Axi está disponível apenas para clientes da AxiTrader Limited. Os CFDs apresentam um elevado risco de perda de investimento. Em nossas negociações com você, atuaremos como uma contraparte principal para todas as suas posições. Este conteúdo pode não estar disponível em sua região. Para obter mais informações, consulte os nossos Termos de Serviço.

*Aplicam–se taxas padrão de negociação e depósito mínimo.

**Concedido ao Grupo de Empresas Axi.


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Axi feiert große Erfolge bei den Global Business and Finance Magazine Awards 2025

SYDNEY, Aug. 13, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — Axi, ein führender Anbieter globaler Finanzdienstleistungen, wurde bei den Global Business and Finance Magazine Awards* 2025 mit mehreren renommierten Auszeichnungen geehrt, die seine wachsende globale Bedeutung und sein konsequentes Streben nach Exzellenz unterstreichen.

Axi wurde mit folgenden Auszeichnungen geehrt:

Beste Finanzinstitution 2025 – Großbritannien

Beste Finanzinstitution 2025 – Lateinamerika

Beste Finanzinstitution 2025 – Naher Osten

Diese Auszeichnungen zeugen von Axis’ unermüdlichem Engagement für die Förderung der finanziellen Inklusion und die Entwicklung intelligenter, kundenorientierter Lösungen auf den globalen Märkten. Von zentraler Bedeutung für diesen Erfolg war das Wachstum von Axi Select, dem Flaggschiff–Programm des Unternehmens für die Kapitalallokation, das aufstrebenden Traderinnen und Tradern die Tools und Geldmittel zur Verfügung stellt, die sie für eine erfolgreiche Karriere im Trading benötigen. Axi Select hat Tausenden von Traderinnen und Tradern weltweit den Zugang zu institutioneller Unterstützung ermöglicht und so ihr Potenzial verwirklicht.

Das Angebot an Trading–Produkten und –Dienstleistungen von Axi – von fortschrittlichen Analysen über nahtlose Multi–Asset–Plattformen bis hin zu maßgeschneiderten Lösungen für Einzel–, professionelle und institutionelle Kundinnen und Kunden – hat wesentlich zur Entwicklung einer stärkeren und inklusiveren globalen Trading–Community beigetragen. Besonders deutlich zeigt sich dies in Großbritannien, Lateinamerika und dem Nahen Osten, wo Axi sein lokales Angebot und seine Support–Dienstleistungen erheblich ausgebaut hat.

Hannah Hill, Head of Brand and Sponsorship bei Axi, äußerte sich zu dieser Leistung wie folgt:

„Wir bei Axi glauben, dass Exzellenz kein Ziel ist, sondern eine tägliche Verpflichtung gegenüber unseren Kundinnen und Kunden, unseren Mitarbeitenden und den Prinzipien, die für unseren Fortschritt ausschlaggebend sind. Die Anerkennung in so unterschiedlichen Regionen ist ein eindrucksvoller Beweis dafür, dass Vertrauen, Innovationskraft und Integrität weltweit Wirkung entfalten, wenn sie fest in der Unternehmenskultur verankert sind.“

Über Axi

Axi ist ein globales Online–Devisen– und CFD–Handelsunternehmen mit Tausenden von Kundinnen und Kunden in über 100 Ländern der Welt. Axi bietet CFDs für verschiedene Anlageklassen an, darunter Forex, Aktien, Gold, Öl, Kaffee und mehr.

Für weitere Informationen oder zusätzliche Anmerkungen von Axi wenden Sie sich bitte an: [email protected].

Das Axi–Programm ist ausschließlich Kundinnen und Kunden von AxiTrader Limited vorbehalten. CFDs bergen ein hohes Verlustrisiko für die Anlegerinnen und Anleger. In unseren Geschäften mit Ihnen treten wir als Vertragspartner für alle Ihre Positionen auf. Dieser Inhalt ist in Ihrer Region möglicherweise nicht verfügbar. Weitere Informationen finden Sie in unseren allgemeinen Geschäftsbedingungen.

*Es gelten die üblichen Trading–Gebühren und Mindestanforderungen für Einzahlungen.

**Erteilt an die Axi–Unternehmensgruppe.


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From the Margins to the Courts: St Lucia Joins Caribbean Fight to Dismantle Anti-LGBTQI+ Colonial Laws

Credit: Stella_E/Getty Images

By Inés M. Pousadela
MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, Aug 13 2025 – When Kenita Placide co-founded United and Strong, St Lucia’s first LGBTQI+ organisation in 2001, death threats were routine. Over the years, several friends were murdered for being gay. But 24 years on, Kenita’s Caribbean island nation has become the latest to overturn a colonial legacy that criminalised LGBTQI+ people.

On 29 July, the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court – a St Lucia-based regional court that serves nine countries and territories – declared sections 132 and 133 of St Lucia’s Criminal Code unconstitutional, effectively decriminalising consensual same-sex sexual activity. This made St Lucia the fifth Caribbean country in four years to achieve this legal breakthrough through the courts.

St Lucia’s victory demonstrates that civil society can keep making gains even in largely regressive times. It offers fresh hope for LGBTQI+ activists in the six countries of the Americas that criminalise same-sex relations: Belize, Grenada, Guyana, Jamaica, St Vincent and the Grenadines and Trinidad and Tobago.

Colonial laws, contemporary resistance

All the criminalising countries in the Americas are part of the Commonwealth Caribbean, where the prohibition of consensual same-sex sexual activity remains an enduring legacy of British colonial rule.

Following independence in 1979, St Lucia retained criminal provisions that punished ‘buggery’ and ‘gross indecency’. Rather than liberalising these laws, a 2004 amendment expanded criminalisation to include sex between women, with jail sentences ranging from five to 10 years.

While prosecutions have been rare in recent decades, these laws have fostered stigma, legitimised prejudice and contributed to discrimination and violence against LGBTQI+ people. They’ve hindered access to essential services, particularly healthcare, and denied LGBTQI+ people full legal protection. Civil society has documented numerous instances of verbal harassment, physical abuse and discrimination in workplaces and public spaces.

The tide began to turn over the past decade. The Commonwealth Caribbean’s first public Pride event was held in Jamaica in 2015, marking the growing visibility of the LGBTQI+ movement. Laws began to change, starting with a successful court challenge in Belize in 2016.

Civil society’s strategic litigation

The legal challenge in St Lucia was spearheaded by the Eastern Caribbean Alliance for Diversity and Equality, founded by Kenita in 2016, and United and Strong, which evolved from an HIV/AIDS organisation into a human rights group documenting abuses, advocating for reforms and providing essential services.

Together, they brought the case as part of a Caribbean litigation strategy launched in 2019, filing challenges in four Eastern Caribbean countries – Antigua and Barbuda, Grenada, St Kitts and Nevis and St Lucia – plus Barbados, which has its own court system. The lawsuit argued that virtually identical criminal provisions violated constitutional rights to privacy, equality and liberty. Positive rulings came for Antigua and Barbuda, Barbados and St Kitts and Nevis in 2022, while a separate legal challenge succeeded in Dominica in 2024.

St Lucia’s ruling was particularly significant given recent setbacks, including the recriminalisation of consensual same-sex relations in Trinidad and Tobago in March, reversing a 2018 court ruling, and the dismissal of challenges to anti-gay laws in St Vincent and the Grenadines last year.

The road ahead: from decriminalisation to equality

Legal reforms are still needed. While the 2006 Labour Code prohibits workplace discrimination based on sexual orientation and the 2022 Domestic Violence Act protects same-sex couples from abuse, significant gaps remain in housing and public services protection.

Future civil society advocacy is expected to focus on broader legal protections, marriage equality, adoption rights, recognition of non-binary genders, gender change procedures and banning harmful practices such as conversion therapy. But conservative religious groups, which hold significant sway in many Caribbean societies, are expected to resist further advances, which they frame as threats to traditional values. Experiences in Dominica and elsewhere suggest that backlash is likely.

Evidence indicates laws are moving faster than public opinion. St Lucia now ranks 154th out of 198 countries on Equaldex’s Equality Index, which rates countries according to their LGBTQI+ friendliness. But the index shows a significant gap between limited legal protections and broadly negative social attitudes, with legal rights scoring 46 out of 100 while public opinion lags at just 17 out of 100.

While governments and courts can advance recognition of LGBTQI+ rights through legislative and judicial reforms, deep-seated social prejudices may remain. Activists face a double challenge: pursuing legal victories while simultaneously engaging in the slower, more complex work of changing attitudes. Without this parallel effort, legal protections may fail to translate into genuine equality in daily life, leaving LGBTQI+ people formally protected but still vulnerable.

St Lucia’s LGBTQI+ rights activists still have much work ahead, but their approach – combining grassroots organising, strategic litigation, regional coordination and decades of persistence – offers a blueprint for others striving for rights. It proves that even in conservative contexts, civil society can achieve change by building coalitions and persisting over time. St Lucia has just offered fresh hope to embattled activists elsewhere in the Caribbean, and around the world.

Inés M. Pousadela is CIVICUS Senior Research Specialist, co-director and writer for CIVICUS Lens and co-author of the State of Civil Society Report.

For interviews or more information, please contact [email protected]

 


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Falcon Technic تُعيد تشغيل طائرةGlobal Express XRS بعد عملية صيانة هامة

دبي، الإمارات العربية المتحدة، , Aug. 13, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) —  أعلنت شركة Falcon Technic، وهي إحدى شركات خدمات الطيران البارزة ضمن مجموعة Alex Group Investment، عن الانتهاء الناجح من الفحص الدوري المحدد للصيانة الذي يُجرى بعد 60 شهراً من التشغيل، لطائرتها من طراز Global Express XRS (A6–AFC). يشكّل هذا الإنجاز انعكاساً لقدرات الشركة في مجال الصيانة الأساسية، التي تُنفذ داخلياً ضمن منشأتها المتطورة والمتخصصة في خدمات الصيانة والإصلاح والتجديد (MRO) في دبي.

تُعدّ فحوصات الصيانة الأساسية من عمليات الفحص المخطّط لها الأكثر دقة وتفصيلية في دورة حياة الطائرة، وتشمل كل أنظمة وأجهزة الطائرة ومكوّناتها، بدءاً من الهيكل وأنظمة الإلكترونيات الجوية، وصولاً إلى الأنظمة الهيدروليكية وأجهزة التحكم في الطيران. من شأن هذه الفحوصات الدورية أن تسمح باكتشاف أي أعطال محتملة يتوجب معالجتها في مركز خدمات الصيانة والإصلاح والتجديد (MRO).

هذا وقد تولّت فرق الصيانة التابعة لشركة Falcon Technic تنفيذ عدد من أعمال الصيانة الهيكلية بكفاءة لمعالجة التلف والتآكل الذي تمّ اكتشافه على الحافة الخلفية لجناح الطائرة وفي الحجرات الجافة” داخل الهيكل. بالإضافة إلى فحوصات الصيانة المجدولة، شكّلت أعمال الصيانة هذه فرصة قيّمة لتطبيق أحدث تعليمات التحديث والخدمة الفنية، على غرار تلك التي تمّ تنفيذها لترقية نظام الكشف عن “هواء النزف” الذي يؤخذ من المحرك لتشغيل مجموعة متنوعة من الأنظمة. تجدر الإشارة إلى أنه تمّ تنفيذ جميع هذه الأشغال الإضافية ضمن فترة التوقف المخطط لها.

وبعد استكمال أكثر من ألفي ساعة من العمل على يد فريق الصيانة المتخصص المكوّن من ثمانية مهندسين، وقبل قرار إعادة التشغيل، خضعت الطائرة لرحلة تجريبية إضافية للتأكد من حسن أدائها. ولم يُسجّل الطاقم أي ملاحظة خلال الرحلة، ما يؤكد جاهزيتها الكاملة للعودة إلى التشغيل.
وقد أُعيدت الطائرة إلى الخدمة بتاريخ 9 أغسطس 2025، بعد الانتهاء من جميع أعمال الفحص والإصلاح، وهي الآن جاهزة للتحليق مجدداً ضمن أسطول شركة Falcon.

وفي معرض تعليقه على هذا الإنجاز، قال السيد Sultan Rashit Abdulla Rashit Al Shene، مؤسس ورئيس مجلس إدارة Alex Group Investment: عندما تدخل أي طائرة إلى منشأة تابعة لشركة Falcon Technic، فإنها تخرج أكثر قوة، وأكثر أماناً، وتصبح جاهزة للتحليق من جديد. هذا لا ينطبق على الطائرات ضمن أسطولنا فحسب، إنما على كل طائرة يختار أصحابها الوثوق بخبراتنا. وتُعدّ هذه الفحوصات دليلاً واضحاً على الكفاءة والاحترافية التي يتمتع بهما فريقنا الفني.”

تجدر الإشارة إلى أنه سيتمّ إجراء فحص الصيانة الرئيسي التالي لطائرة A6–AFC بعد انقضاء 500 ساعة طيران إضافية. أما في الوقت الحالي، فقد استعادت طائرة Global Express XRS مكانها الطبيعي: في السماء.

لمحة عن شركة Falcon
تُعتبر Falcon مزوّداً رائداً لخدمات الطيران الشاملة، تقدم مجموعة شاملة من خدمات الطيران التي تلبي جميع احتياجات العملاء، وكل ذلك ضمن منظومة واحدة متكاملة.
لاكتشاف المزيد عن خدماتنا ومنتجاتنا، يمكنكم زيارة موقعنا الإلكتروني الرسمي على الرابط التالي: flyfalcon.com ومتابعتنا عبر منصات التواصل الاجتماعي “إنستغرام” و“لينكدإن”.

للاستفسارات الإعلامية
Ines Nacerddine
مديرة قسم التسويق – قطاع الطيران
Alex Group Investment
البريد الإلكتروني: [email protected]

يمكنكم الاطلاع على الصورة المرفقة بهذا البيان الصحفي عبر الرابط الالكتروني التالي: 

https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/479a008d–e111–44ae–a4f8–b8797bec827b


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Four Ways Asia Can Strengthen Regional Health Security Before the Next Pandemic

Regional cooperation can help countries respond more effectively to future pandemics. Credit: Asian Development Bank (ADB)

By Eduardo Banzon, Michelle Apostol and Anne Cortez
MANILA, Philippines, Aug 13 2025 – In an interconnected world when infections can circle the globe in hours, cooperation in preparing for pandemics is essential. The COVID-19 pandemic highlighted just how vulnerable countries are when surveillance is fragmented, laboratory networks are underfunded and underequipped, and vaccines are not dispersed equitably.

To safeguard regional health security, several health interventions must be treated as regional public goods.

Regional public goods are services or assets that benefit multiple countries but cannot be provided by a single nation alone. They allow developing economies to cooperate on costs, expertise, and technology for greater development impact than they could achieve individually.

For example, efficient regional infrastructure and trade facilitation brings down transportation and trade costs and promotes freer movement of people and goods; delivering energy across borders improves access to sustainable energy; and financial agreements, such as the Chiang Mai Initiative Multilateralization, boost regional financial stability during crises.

Regional public goods fall into three broad categories: economic initiatives such as transport infrastructure, energy networks, and trade agreements like the Regional Comprehensive Economic Partnership; environmental efforts including river basin management, pollution control, and cross-border conservation programs; and social investments such as public health systems, regional education platforms, and collaborative research networks.

Countries in Asia and the Pacific already work together on trade, infrastructure, and climate action. Broadening areas of cooperation, however, can help countries meet their development goals and address increasingly complex health challenges, including emergencies.

This partnership is particularly important in the area of health emergency response.

A succession of human and animal infections including SARS, avian influenza, African swine fever and COVID-19 have shown just how quickly pathogens can go from a local problem to one that threatens regional and even global security. Countries can protect themselves through early alerts and early action via coordinated surveillance, data-sharing, and equitable vaccine access.

Responses to many recent outbreaks, including the COVID-19 pandemic, have been slow, fragmented, and unfair. Greater regional cooperation can mitigate the impacts of epidemics, especially for the most vulnerable, by pooling expertise, resources, and response capacities.

Health intersects with transport, trade, gender equality, education, and livelihoods. A healthy population underpins a resilient economy and supports social stability. Supporting each other to build systems that can prevent and respond to outbreaks makes sense for countries and the region.

To respond faster and smarter to the next pandemic, countries in Asia and the Pacific should focus on four high-impact areas regional integration and collective action:

Contact Tracing Networks

Early detection saves lives but only if data move faster than the disease. A regional contact tracing network, using interoperable digital tools and shared protocols, can help track outbreaks across borders.

By linking national systems through common standards and real-time data-sharing agreements, countries can monitor risks in high-risk areas, such as along borders and major transit corridors, and prevent spread.

Health Communications Coordination

Misinformation was a major problem during the COVID-19 pandemic, eroding public trust and weakening response efforts. A regional health communications framework, backed by multilingual messaging templates, rumor tracking systems, and coordinated press briefings, can ensure consistent, culturally relevant, and science-based public information across countries. Successes in reaching vulnerable populations and mobile communities can also be quickly shared.

Telemedicine for Cross-Border Care

Regional telemedicine platforms can connect healthcare providers across borders, especially in remote or small island states, ensuring continued access to care even when in-person services are disrupted. Joint investments in infrastructure, digital health standards, and clinician training can allow countries to offer virtual consultations, diagnostics, and even specialist referrals across the region.

Region-wide Public Health Funds

Collaborative procurement of vaccines, therapeutics and diagnostics have helped countries respond to disease outbreaks, and eradicate public health threats. Region-wide public health funds maintained by cooperating counties offer a means of improving timely access to life saving countermeasures.

Effectively preventing and preparing for pandemics requires countries to work in concert. These approaches can strengthen all types of health services and build resilience to all kinds of health threats. Now is the time to act decisively and secure a healthier, more prosperous future for all.

This article was originally published on the Asian Development Blog, and is based, in part, on research related to ADB’s 1st INSPIRE Health Forum: Inclusive, Sustainable, Prosperous and Resilient Health Systems in Asia and the Pacific. Ben Coghlan contributed to this blog post.

Dr. Eduardo P. Banzon is ADB Director, Health Practice Team, Human and Social Development Sectors Office, Sectors Group, who champions Universal Health Coverage and has long provided technical support to countries in Asia and the Pacific in their pursuit of this goal.

Dr. Michelle Apostol is a Health Officer for the Health Practice Team of ADB supporting the bank’s initiatives in strengthening health systems of member countries and advocating for the advancement of Universal Health Coverage (UHC).

Anne Cortez is a communications and knowledge management consultant with ADB. She brings over a decade of experience working with governments, think tanks, nonprofits, and international organizations on initiatives advancing health equity, climate action, and digital inclusion across Asia and the Pacific.

IPS UN Bureau

 


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Bending the Curve: Overhaul Global Food Systems to Avert Worsening Land Crisis

Scientists say replacing just 10 percent of global vegetable intake with seaweed-derived products could free up large portions of land. Credit: Joyce Chimbi/IPS

Scientists say replacing just 10 percent of global vegetable intake with seaweed-derived products could free up large portions of land. Credit: Joyce Chimbi/IPS

By Joyce Chimbi
NAIROBI, Aug 13 2025 (IPS)

Current rates of land degradation pose a major environmental and socioeconomic threat, driving climate change, biodiversity loss, and social crises. Food production to feed more than 8 billion people is the dominant land use on Earth. Yet, this industrial-scale enterprise comes with a heavy environmental toll.

Preventing and reversing land degradation are key objectives of the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) and are also fundamental for the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) and the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD).

These three conventions emerged from the 1992 Rio Earth Summit to address the interconnected crises of biodiversity loss, climate change and land degradation. A paper published today in Nature by 21 leading scientists argues that the targets of “these conventions can only be met by ‘bending the curve’ of land degradation and that transforming food systems is fundamental for doing so.”

Lead author Fernando T. Maestre of the King Abdullah University of Science and Technology (KAUST), Saudi Arabia, says the paper presents “a bold, integrated set of actions to tackle land degradation, biodiversity loss, and climate change together, as well as a clear pathway for implementing them by 2050.”

“By transforming food systems, restoring degraded land, harnessing the potential of sustainable seafood, and fostering cooperation across nations and sectors, we can ‘bend the curve’ and reverse land degradation while advancing towards goals of the UN Convention to Combat Desertification and other global agreements.”

Co-author Barron J. Orr, UNCCD’s Chief Scientist, says, “Once soils lose fertility, water tables deplete, and biodiversity is lost, restoring the land becomes exponentially more expensive. Ongoing rates of land degradation contribute to a cascade of mounting global challenges, including food and water insecurity, forced relocation and population migration, social unrest, and economic inequality.”

“Land degradation isn’t just a rural issue; it affects the food on all our plates, the air we breathe, and the stability of the world we live in. This isn’t about saving the environment; it’s about securing our shared future.”

The authors suggest an ambitious but achievable target of 50 percent land restoration for 2050—currently, 30 percent by 2030—with enormous co-benefits for climate, biodiversity and global health. Titled ‘Bending the curve of land degradation to achieve global environmental goals,’ the paper argues that it is imperative to ‘bend the curve’ of land degradation by halting land conversion while restoring half of degraded lands by 2050.

“Food systems have not yet been fully incorporated into intergovernmental agreements, nor do they receive sufficient focus in current strategies to address land degradation. Rapid, integrated reforms focused on global food systems, however, can move land health from crisis to recovery and secure a healthier, more stable planet for all,” reads parts of the paper.

Against this backdrop, the authors break new ground by quantifying the impact of reducing food waste by 75 percent by 2050 and maximizing sustainable ocean-based food production—measures that alone could spare an area larger than Africa. They say restoring 50 percent of degraded land through sustainable land management practices would correspond to the restoration of 3 Mkm² of cropland and 10 Mkm² of non-cropland, a total of 13 Mkm².

Stressing that land restoration must involve the people who live on and manage the land—especially Indigenous Peoples, smallholder farmers, women, and other vulnerable people and communities. Co-author Dolors Armenteras, Professor of Landscape Ecology at Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Bogotá, says land degradation is “a key factor in forced migration and conflict over resources.”

“Regions that rely heavily on agriculture for livelihoods, especially smallholder farmers, who feed much of the world, are particularly vulnerable. These pressures could destabilize entire regions and amplify global risks.”

To support these vulnerable segments of the population, the paper calls for interventions such as shifting agricultural subsidies from large-scale industrial farms toward sustainable smallholders, incentivizing good land stewardship among the world’s 608 million farms, and fostering their access to technology, secure land rights, and fair markets.

“Land is more than soil and space. It harbors biodiversity, cycles water, stores carbon, and regulates climate. It gives us food, sustains life, and holds deep roots of ancestry and knowledge. Today, over one-third of Earth’s land is used to grow food – feeding a global population of more than 8 billion people,” says Co-author Elisabeth Huber-Sannwald, Professor, the Instituto Potosino de Investigación Científica y Tecnológica, San Luis Potosí, Mexico.

“Yet today,” she continues, “Modern farming practices, deforestation, and overuse are degrading soil, polluting water, and destroying vital ecosystems. Food production alone drives nearly 20 percent of global emissions of greenhouse gases. We need to act. To secure a thriving future – and protect land – we must reimagine how we farm, how we live, and how we relate to nature – and to each other.”

With an estimated 56.5 Mkm² of agricultural land, cropland, and rangelands being used to produce food, and roughly 33 percent of all food produced being wasted, of which 14 percent is lost post-harvest at farms and 19 percent at the retail, food service and household stages, reducing food waste by 75 percent, therefore, could spare roughly 13.4 Mkm² of land.

The authors’ proposed remedies include policies to prevent overproduction and spoilage, banning food industry rules that reject “ugly” produce, encouraging food donations and discounted sales of near-expiry products, education campaigns to reduce household waste and supporting small farmers in developing countries to improve storage and transport.

Other proposed solutions include integrating land and marine food systems, as red meat produced in unsustainable ways consumes large amounts of land, water, and feed and emits significant greenhouse gases. Seafood and seaweed are sustainable, nutritious alternatives. Seaweed, for example, needs no freshwater and absorbs atmospheric carbon.

The authors recommend measures such as replacing 70 percent of unsustainably produced red meat with seafood, such as wild or farmed fish and mollusks. Replacing just 10 percent of global vegetable intake with seaweed-derived products could free up over 0.4 Mkm² of cropland.

They nonetheless note that these changes are especially relevant for wealthier countries with high meat consumption. In some poorer regions, animal products remain crucial for nutrition. The combination of food waste reduction, land restoration, and dietary shifts, therefore, would spare or restore roughly 43.8 Mkm² in 30 years (2020-2050).

The proposed measures combined would also contribute to emission reduction efforts by mitigating roughly 13.24 Gt of CO₂-equivalent per year through 2050 and help the world community achieve its commitments in several international agreements, including the three Rio Conventions and UN SDGs.

Overall, the authors call for the UN’s three Rio conventions—CBD, UNCCD and UNFCCC—to unite around shared land and food system goals and encourage the exchange of state-of-the-art knowledge, track progress and streamline science into more effective policies, all to accelerate action on the ground.

A step in the right direction, UNCCD’s 197 Parties, at their most recent Conference of Parties (COP16) in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, have already adopted a decision on avoiding, reducing and reversing land and soil degradation of agricultural lands.

The Findings By Numbers

  • 56%: Projected increase in food production needed by 2050 if we stay on our current path
  • 34%: Portion of Earth’s ice-free land already used for food production, headed to 42% by 2050
  • 21%: Share of global greenhouse gas emissions produced by food systems
  • 80%: Proportion of deforestation driven by food production
  • 70%: Amount of freshwater consumption that goes to agriculture
  • 33%: Fraction of global food that currently goes to waste
  • USD 1 trillion: Estimated annual value of food lost or wasted globally
  • 75%: Ambitious target for global food waste reduction by 2050
  • 50%: Proposed portion of degraded land to be restored by 2050 using sustainable land management
  • USD 278 billion: Annual funding gap to achieve UNCCD land restoration goals
  • 608 million: Number of farms on the planet
  • 90%: Percentage of all farms under 2 hectares
  • 35%: Share of the world’s food produced by small farms
  • 6.5 billion tons: Potential biomass yield using 650 million hectares of ocean for seaweed farming
  • 17.5 million km²: Estimated cropland area saved if humanity adopts the proposed Rio+ diet (less unsustainably produced red meat and more sustainably sourced seafood and seaweed-derived food products)
  • 166 million: Number of people who could avoid micronutrient deficiencies with more aquatic foods in their diet

 

IPS UN Bureau Report

 


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