Who benefits if “deserts” are made fertile and productive, and frozen regions warmed?

Who benefits if “deserts” are made fertile and productive, and frozen regions warmed?

You followed me, I check goals and methods before I follow back. Today I was reviewing the #deserts of the world and their human populations. Significant portions of the worlds surface, including much that is frozen, could be greened and improved.
 
Going to #Mars and #Moon is fun to think about, but most any human can learn to live in dry regions where nothing is growing or living. And it does not cost trillions of dollars to travel there.
 
For the Famine Early Warning System, we made maps of the Sahel countries, for all northern #Africa. And for years before that with Georgetown University Center for Population Research, I studied and, with USAID, modeled the futures of those countries at least 50 years out. Now I can go out much farther and in billion-fold more detail. @CarbonCredChris
 
Perhaps you analyzed deeply what countries are doing with #greening, #plantingTrees. And who is encouraging human groups to put effort into lifetimes of planting and greening. It is as though they were asked to #ColonizeMars or #ColonizeMoon
 
#CarbonCredits pale compared to the value of the “1/3 the land surface” made green and productive. Since most cities are deserts now, those too. I think you are not counting the positive value of a world that learns to live with more energy in the atmosphere. Where #DirectedClimate and #PlannedClimate and #GlobalCollaboration can make huge regions accessible to burgeoning populations that cannot afford #ElonMusk high prices to live on Mars or Moon.
 
Not only is it possible, but beneficial to green the world’s deserts – carefully, fairly, openly – for the benefit of the human and related species, not just individuals and small groups!
 
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Islam_by_country#/media/File:Islam_percent_population_in_each_nation_World_Map_Muslim_data_by_Pew_Research.svg
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Desert
 
Richard Collins, The Internet Foundation
 
Richard K Collins

About: Richard K Collins

The Internet Foundation Internet policies, global issues, global open lossless data, global open collaboration


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