Roads
expanding fast worldwide, better planning needed to aid
food output : study
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[August 28, 2014]
By Alister Doyle
OSLO, Aug 27 (Reuters) -
New roads long enough to girdle the Earth 600 times are
expected to be built by 2050 and better planning is
needed to protect the environment while also raising
food production, a study showed on Wednesday. |
The study in the journal Nature showed that roads can aid farmers,
especially in developing nations where food production is held back
by a lack of access to markets or to fertilisers and other
technologies.
But too often, new roads slice through remaining wildernesses in the
Amazon, New Guinea, Siberia or the Congo Basin, which are home to
valuable species of animals and plants and help to slow climate
change by storing greenhouse gases.
"While new roads can promote social and economic development, they
can also open a Pandora's box of environmental problems," a team of
scientists from Australia, Malaysia, the United States, Britain and
Costa Rica wrote in the study.
The report's maps showed that 12 percent of the world land area
could benefit from roads to help raise farm output with little
environmental damage, such as areas of India, central Europe and
Asia, North America and the Sahel in Africa.
New roads likely to be built by 2050 would total 250 million kms
(155 million miles), a 60 percent gain from 2010 and long enough to
encircle the planet more than 600 times, it said.
Lead author William Laurance, of James Cook University in Australia,
told Reuters the maps were "just a starting point" for a wider
debate about the economic impact of roads.
Many other local factors, such as keeping costs down by taking the
shortest route, usually determine routes. Shorter roads also mean
less pollution by vehicles.
"What we're attempting is to put road-building into a wider
context," Laurance said. "There are a lot of local factors that will
come into actual road planning -- but one of the things that's been
ignored so far is the 'big picture'."
ROADS HELP GDP
Many other studies have shown that roads boost growth. A World Bank
report this year about an expansion of the road network in Brazil
since the 1960s found that "roads are shown to account for half of
per capita GDP growth".
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The maps tried to value the animals and plants in each region and
gauge the amount of carbon stored in vegetation, a natural buffer
against climate change. They also created an index to value
agricultural production.
Stephen Perz, an expert at the University of Florida, said the
quality of data available for creating such maps varied a lot from
country to country but that the study could help "a broader effort
to improve such maps".
"Governments routinely plan roads without adequate consultation with
local people and construction often goes ahead with insufficient
attention to minimizing the environmental effects," he wrote in a
comment in Nature.
(Editing by Gareth Jones)
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