This is Planet Earth

Following are ASTER (Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer) images taken from space that show the sometimes strange and wild beauty of our world as well as its vulnerability to climate change.


Glacial retreat
New Zealand contains over 3,000 glaciers, mostly in the Southern Alps on the South Island. The glaciers have been retreating since 1890. Click here to see the same location in 1990.

Find out how the dust in your country might be contributing to glacier loss here.

IMAGE: NASA/METI/AIST/Japan Space Systems, and U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team

Bottom of the world
Space imagery revealed a wide crack in Pine Island Glacier in the Antarctic. The area has undergone a steady loss of elevation with retreat of the grounding line in recent decades.

Satellites brought you these images, but they can be vulnerable to attacks. Find out here how experts are safeguarding our assets in space.

IMAGE: NASA/GSFC/METI/ERSDAC/JAROS, and U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team

Water sculpture
Erosion has carved the mountain slopes along the western flank of the Andes of Lima, Peru, into long, narrow serpentine ridges.

Click here to see how water erosion can change a landscape.

IMAGE: NASA/GSFC/METI/ERSDAC/JAROS, and U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team

Troubled waters
This image shows the Rio Negro, a tributary of the Amazon River, at Manaus, Brazil, in 2023. Compare this image to one taken in 2020 to see the effects of drought. Here, vegetated areas show up as pink to red. Water is black or blue.

IMAGE: NASA/METI/AIST/Japan Space Systems, and U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team

Fan dance
An alluvial fan spreads between the Kunlun and Altun mountain ranges at the southern border of China’s Taklimakan Desert in this ASTER image. The blue left side is the active part of the fan, made up of water flowing from many small streams. An alluvial fan is an area where rivers deposit silt, sand and other debris over a long period of time.

IMAGE: NASA/GSFC/METI/ERSDAC/JAROS, and U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team

In the pink
Lake Natron in Africa’s Great Rift Valley is the world’s most caustic body of water. The alkaline lake gets its color from salt-loving spirulina algae, whose pigments are passed along to the lesser flamingos that feed on them.

IMAGE: NASA/GSFC/METI/ERSDAC/JAROS, and U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team

A summer thaw
After a 4,400-kilometer journey north from the mountains of south-central Russia, the Lena River fractures into streams that empty into the Arctic Ocean via the Laptev Sea. The Lena River Delta is frozen for as long as seven months of the year, but it thaws during the summer into an ecologically important wetland. Changes in the volume of water emptying into the sea as well as the depth of the permafrost (soil that remains frozen year-round) indicate Arctic climate change. Vegetation shows up as green; places scoured by annual spring floods appear bright white; and mudflats and other areas covered by shallow water are light blue.

Related: The history of remote areas can help guide laws as humans move out into space. Read more here

IMAGE: NASA/GSFC/MITI/ERSDAC/JAROS, and the U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team.

Down under
Lake Mackay is the largest of hundreds of ephemeral lakes scattered throughout Western Australia and the Northern Territory. It is also the second largest lake in Australia. Darker areas indicate desert vegetation or algae, moisture within the soils and lowest elevations where water pools.

IMAGE: NASA/GSFC/METI/ERSDAC/JAROS, and U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team

Endangered glacier
This image of the southwest part of the Malaspina Glacier and Icy Bay in Alaska is a composite of infrared and visible bands. Snow and ice appear light blue; dense vegetation is yellow-orange and green; and less vegetated, gravelly areas are orange. According to Dennis Trabant of the U.S. Geological Survey in Fairbanks, Alaska, the Malaspina Glacier is thinning. Its terminal moraine protects it from contact with the open ocean; without the moraine, or if sea level rises sufficiently to reconnect the glacier with the ocean, the glacier would start calving and retreat significantly.

IMAGE: NASA/GSFC/METI/ERSDAC/JAROS, and U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team

On target
This prominent circular feature in the Sahara desert of Mauritania has attracted attention since the earliest space missions and is now a landmark for shuttle crews. The conspicuous bull’s-eye in the otherwise rather featureless desert has a diameter of almost 50 kilometers. Although it was initially interpreted as a meteorite-impact site, it is now thought to be merely a symmetrical uplift (circular anticline) that has been laid bare by erosion. Paleozoic quartzites form the resistant beds outlining the structure.

Read here to find out how low- and high-tech methods are helping to turn deserts green.

IMAGE: NASA/METI/AIST/Japan Space Systems, and U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team

Heart of sand
The Rub’ al Khali or Empty Quarter is one of the largest sand deserts in the world, encompassing most of the southern third of the Arabian Peninsula and including parts of Oman, United Arab Emirates and Yemen. The desert covers 650,000 square kilometers, more than the area of France.

A hearty desert resident might be the key to a more environmentally responsible food source. Read here for more.

IMAGE: NASA/GSFC/METI/ERSDAC/JAROS, and U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team

Ancient impact
The Shoemaker Impact Structure in Australia is estimated to be between 1,000 and 600 million years ago. The structure is 30 kilometers in diameter and is recognized by the deformation of the resistant ironstones of the Frere Formation, shown here in dark green. Low-lying areas are salt-encrusted seasonal and dry lakes.

IMAGE: NASA/METI/AIST/Japan Space Systems, and U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team

Wind up
The Songhua River meanders through northeast China. The image also shows oxbow lakes, lakes that form in abandoned meander loops of a river channel.

IMAGE: NASA/GSFC/METI/ERSDAC/JAROS, and the U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team

Written in the earth
The Messak Settafet plateau’s dark, erosion-resistant sandstone separates the Ubari Sand Sea to the north and the Marzūq Sand Sea to the south. Although the plateau in southwestern Libya now receives less than 10 millimeters of rain annually, clues in the landscape make clear it was once much wetter. Deeply incised dried stream valleys, or wadis, crisscross the plateau, indicating significant past water flow.

IMAGE: NASA Earth Observatory images by Michala Garrison, using Landsat data from the U.S. Geological Survey

City in the desert
In the middle of the Arabian desert the city Green Oasis Wadi Al Dawasir is being developed for the Wadi Al Dawasir region of Saudi Arabia. Solar fields supply the city and the region with energy. Center pivot irrigation apparatus drawing water from subterranean aquifers feed hundreds of circular agricultural fields.

IMAGE: NASA/GSFC/METI/ERSDAC/JAROS, and U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team

Agriculture in Sudan
Al Jazirah, also known as Gezira, is one of the 26 states of Sudan. The state lies between the Blue Nile and the White Nile in the east-central region of the country and is a major agriculture center.

IMAGE: NASA/GSFC/METI/ERSDAC/JAROS, and U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team

Striking gold
The Escondida open-pit mine in Chile’s Atacama Desert produces copper, gold and silver. Primary concentration of the ore is done on-site; the concentrate is then sent to the coast for further processing through a 170-kilometer-long pipe.

Mining might not just be an industry only on Earth. Read here to find out how the moon might provide important materials as humans step into space. 

IMAGE: NASA

The cold north
Franz Josef Land, an archipelago in the far north of Russia, consists of 191 islands covering about 200 by 325 kilometers. It has no native inhabitants.

IMAGE: NASA/GSFC/METI/ERSDAC/JAROS, and U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team

Picture this
Jebel Uweinat is a mountain range at the Egyptian-Sudanese-Libyan border. In general, the west slope constitutes an oasis, with wells, bushes and grass. The area is notable for its prehistoric petroglyphs representing giraffes, lions, ostriches, gazelles and human figures.

IMAGE: NASA/GSFC/METI/ERSDAC/JAROS, and U.S./Japan ASTER Science Team

ASTER, a collaboration of U.S. and Japanese scientists, produces images using infrared, red and green wavelengths.

On the path to sustainable
construction

The United Arab Emirates is a popular tourist destination, with much of the draw attributed to its impressive megastructures: the Burj Khalifa and the Future Museum in Dubai, Abu Dhabi’s Emirates Palace and Qasr al Watan, the Louvre and, of course, Sheikh Zayed Mosque.

There is over U.S. $710 billion invested in ongoing construction projects aimed at fostering economic growth and development. At the same time, architectural marvels and rapid urbanization often come at the cost of environmental sustainability.

Listen to the Deep Dive:

Shadeedha Saradara is a Ph.D. student at Khalifa University. With KU professor Malik Khalfan, she examined the sustainability initiatives surrounding construction efforts in the UAE, evaluating their effectiveness and drawing comparisons with regional and international standards.

The UAE government is unequivocally committed to attaining its sustainable development goals.

Shadeedha Saradara, Khalifa University

Saradara says the built environment is a major contributor to global environmental challenges, responsible for over 50 percent of the annual global extraction of materials and a significant portion of greenhouse gas emissions.

“In 2015, the same year members of the U.N. signed the Paris Agreement to substantially reduce global greenhouse gas emissions, the construction industry was responsible for 38 percent of the total world carbon dioxide emissions,” Saradara says. “It’s imperative that we quickly and substantially reduce these emissions in the building sector on a worldwide scale if we want to achieve the objectives outlined in the Paris Agreement.”

However, the journey to sustainable construction is fraught with obstacles. The UAE, a nation synonymous with rapid development and constant construction, serves as a case study for this challenge.

“The UAE’s transformation from a modest economy to a global hub has been meteoric,” Saradara says.


IMAGE: Unsplash

“But this comes with a hefty carbon footprint. The construction sector here must now pivot toward a circular approach that emphasizes reuse and minimizes waste. This isn’t just an environmental imperative, it can also have economic benefits, reducing the long-term costs associated with material consumption and waste management,” she adds.

Saradara notes the UAE’s commitment to sustainable development is evident in its policies and practices. Despite its reliance on fossil fuels and the environmental pressures of air-conditioning and desalination, the country is striving to reduce its carbon emissions and enhance its sustainability credentials.

“The construction sector stands as a cornerstone of the UAE’s economy, but this comes with a set of environmental responsibilities,” she says. “There are new green building standards and certifications which are augmented by existing global certifications, and efforts to reduce emissions from the construction industry and construction and demolition waste are all backed up with Emirate-level programs and policies.”

More legislation and initiatives are still needed to address the challenge of sustainable construction, but Saradara says the UAE is definitely heading in the right direction: “The UAE government is unequivocally committed to attaining its sustainable development goals, showcasing its dedication to ensuring a sustainable future for its population and natural resources.”

KU researchers to join world
thought forum

Some of Khalifa University’s top researchers will represent the institution at XPANSE 2024 in Abu Dhabi.

Some of Khalifa University’s top researchers will represent the institution at XPANSE 2024 in Abu Dhabi.

The inaugural forum Nov. 20-22 seeks to gather researchers, industry leaders, government officials and other thought leaders from around the world to discuss such fields as genomics, exotic computing, organoid intelligence and sentient cities.

Set to represent KU are: Yahya Zweiri, director of the Advanced Research and Innovation Center; Habiba Al Safar, dean of the College of Health Sciences and Medicine; Yarjan Samad, assistant professor of aerospace engineering; and Lucia Delogu, associate professor of biological sciences.


Suzanne Condie Lambert, editor of KUST Review and KUSTReview.com, will lead a panel discussion on agricultural technology.

Other scheduled speakers from Abu Dhabi include Najwa Aaraj, CEO of TII; Sana Amairi-Pyka, who studies quantum computing for TII; physicist Merritt Moore from NYU Abu Dhabi; and Hoda Alkhzaimi, founder and director of the Emerging Advanced Research Acceleration for Technologies, Security and Cryptology research lab and center. 

Other leaders on the schedule feature Nobel laureates Roger Penrose, Stephen Chu and Anton Zeilinger; MIT Media Lab associate director Hiroshi Ishii; Stability AI CEO Prem Akkaraju; and former United Nations Under-Secretary General Cristina Gallach.

REGREEN

Six thousand years ago, the Sahara, now the largest desert in the world, was grassland. The oscillation of the Earth’s axis turned the Sahara from an orchard to a sandy area where almost nothing can grow. This was a natural process of desertization and is in striking contrast to what is happening now as large areas of the planet are being desertified at an accelerated rate.

According to the United Nations, more than 24 billion tons of fertile soil disappear every year. More than 75 percent of Earth’s land area is already degraded. More than 90 percent could be by 2050.

Human-caused desertification is expected to intensify significantly in the near future as a result of climate change and soil degradation, exacerbated by overgrazing and unsustainable agriculture.

Agriculture in arid areas requires nutritional supplements, imported soil and processed water for irrigation purposes, increasing costs and negatively affecting the environment. It’s a feedback loop – the way we’re doing things now is making things even worse.

Soil doesn’t just become sand because the temperatures rise. Centuries of animal grazing strips vegetation, and local populations tend to clear land for monoculture crops and habitation. Where trees and greenery are removed, so is the land’s ability to retain moisture and its structure. Soil is washed or blown away, and what was once fertile land becomes desert.

But it’s almost impossible to turn a desert back into land fit for agriculture. Or is it? There have been plenty of attempts.

  Gobi,China

China has been fighting desertification for decades. The Gobi is the fastest-growing desert on Earth, transforming nearly 10,400 square kilometers of grassland per year into wasteland.

In 1978, the country launched the Great Green Wall of China initiative, the largest afforestation project in the world, which would see 66 billion trees planted in an effort to combat the expanding Gobi. Spanning 4,500 kilometers, this forest was meant to stop the spread of the desert, buffer sand storms and offset the country’s carbon footprint.

CAPTION: China and a coalition of African nations took different approaches to the “green wall,” which uses forest belts to block wind and sand, protecting agricultural and pastoral land from soil erosion. IMAGES: Envato  GRAPHICS: Anas Albounni, KUST Review

Like many reforestation projects, the Great Green Wall uses fast-growing species like aspen, birch and poplar, none of which are native to China and all of which require large quantities of water: perhaps a less-than-wise choice for a desert environment. Such monoculture ecosystems are also fragile. In 2000, a single disease took down 1 billion poplar trees, setting the project back 20 years.

Even worse, the trees that survive damage the environment. As the trees require so much water, hardier native desert plants are stripped of the little water they were getting in the first place. They die off, the top soil no longer anchored by their roots blows away, and the area has even fewer nutrients than before. The soil structure changes, its capacity to retain water is diminished, and the desert’s expansion marches on.

However, there are also success stories and audacious projects both planned and started.

At the end of the 20th century, China’s deserts were expanding at a combined annual rate of 10,400 square kilometers. Despite the failed Great Green Wall of China, by 2018, they were shrinking at a rate of 2,424 square kilometers per year.

Much of this success can be attributed to the teams behind regreening the Kubuqi and Ulan Buh deserts.

Kubuqi, China

After more than three decades of effort and innovation, one-third of the Kubuqi Desert has been returned to green.

According to a 2017 U.N. Environment Programme report, more than 6,250 square kilometers of the Kubuqi have been reclaimed.

Local knowledge and modern technology have stabilized mobile dunes into semi-anchored dunes covered with green engineering developments. An area of more than 5,000 square kilometers has been afforested through planting programs, and a sand barrier of more than 10 million trees and 4,000 hectares of grass was established to protect the plantation. Another shelter belt of forest was planted along the northern margin of the Kubuqi, along the south bank of the Yellow River: 350,000 hectares of shelter forest in a belt of trees, bushes and grass over 242 kilometers long and 5 to 20 kilometers wide.

Shelter belts and sand barriers reduce wind speed and sand movement. The less the sand moves, the less the dunes move, all helping slow or even stop the encroaching desert. Anchoring the dunes turned out to be simple: Bundles of reeds, straw and Salix psammophilia, a desert shrub native to East Asia, are laid out in a grid pattern to increase the surface “roughness” and reduce wind speed across the sand, reducing aeolian sand movement.

In these grids, farmers are encouraged to grow licorice. Not only can it withstand drought and the nighttime temperature plummet, but the roots help keep soil in place and return nutrients to the ground, allowing other crops to be planted alongside. After four years, the roots can be harvested and sold as an important ingredient of traditional Chinese medicines.

DATA SOURCE: United Nations  IMAGES: Envato, Shutterstock  GRAPHICS: Anas Albounni, KUST Review

Other saline- and alkali-tolerant plants are also used to reduce salt content in the soil and improve soil properties: Lycium barbarum L. or the matrimony vine, another shrub native to China, sea buckthorn, wild olive and the Euphrates poplar all help restore saline-alkali soils.

The Kubuqi Desert was not transformed overnight. Almost three decades have passed since the Kubuqi Ecological Restoration Project started in 1988.

Africa’s Great Green Wall

This African initiative shares the same name as China’s afforestation attempt, but trees are only part of the equation in the Great Green Wall Initiative across the Sahel-Sahara region. Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Sudan, Chad, Niger, Nigeria, Mali, Burkina Faso, Mauritania and Senegal have joined forces to combat land degradation and restore native plant life.

The African Union in 2007 adopted the project, conceived as a way to combat the expansion of the Sahara. It has expanded to creating a “mosaic of green and productive landscapes” across North Africa and aims to restore 250 million acres by 2030. Despite security issues and political instabilities, 12 million drought-resistant acacia trees have been planted in Senegal, 15 million hectares of degraded land have been restored in Ethiopia and 5 million hectares each were restored in Nigeria and Niger, with a further 3 million rehabilitated in Burkina Faso through local farming practices.

Can we go faster?

Ulan Buh, China

In 2018, Yi Zhijian’s team from Chongqing Jiaotong University turned 650 hectares of the Ulan Buh Desert in Inner Mongolia from sand to soil. Yi isn’t an ecologist or an expert in horticulture: He’s part of a department of mechanics and says a technique called “desert soilization” can make the surface layer of desert sand stick together by changing its mechanical properties.

The team’s success stems from improving soil with poor mechanics – i.e., where soil particles do not show cohesive behavior.

IMAGE: Freepik
Making arid regions bloom – Circular local bioeconomy could be the key

At first glance, North Africa, the Middle East and China appear to have limited agricultural potential. The vast stretches of arid landscapes that dominate these areas conjure images of barrenness, yet bioeconomical initiatives are beginning to take root.

Climate change, unsustainable agriculture and soil degradation are accelerating the progressive growth of drylands with these areas set to affect over 110 million people by 2100. These arid and semiarid areas often have low economic value and are mostly uninhabitable, making it more challenging to use them in a meaningful way. Read more›››

Implementing a local bioeconomy might be the solution. The term “bioeconomy” refers to an economy based on products, services and processes derived from biological resources: the efficient processing of food supply, agro-industrial byproducts and bio-based wastes to increase food security and restore arid soils. The ideal bioeconomy would be circular. Waste from money-making products go back into the ground to produce more money-making products.

By focusing on localized biomass production, people in arid and semiarid areas can benefit from increased food security, cooling effects, carbon sequestration, increased labor demand, pollution control and mental well-being from access to green areas. So says Blaise Tardy, a professor at Khalifa University whose research focuses on integrating arid areas into the global bioeconomy.

“The potential of the bioeconomy in arid regions lies in bioprocesses and biosystems that cater to society’s water, land, food, energy and material needs,” Tardy tells KUST Review. “Strategies such as aquacultures, vertical farming and biotechnological initiatives can drive this green cycle.”

However, a major challenge in implementing this is the poor quality of soils in arid regions, which can range from mineral-based, like sand, to rich organic matter with diverse microbiomes. Richer soils with vegetation have more beneficial interactions between the plant roots and soil microbiomes, critical for nutrient cycling and organic-matter generation.

Indoor farming would produce lignocellulosic – or plant biomass – wastes, a significant byproduct that would usually be disposed of. In a circular bioeconomy, these wastes could revitalize soil in combination with byproducts from the steel industry, for example, which contain micronutrients necessary for soil health.

“Lignocellulosic co-products, in particular, have immense potential in advanced materials production, from pulp materials and sustainable textiles to advanced materials like synthetic proteins,” Tardy says. “Synthetic biology can further expand the range of materials produced, offering advanced applications in various industries.”

Harnessing the opportunities of a bioeconomy in arid areas could hold the key to sustainability and resilience against climate change. However, collaboration is central to success. Countries in the MENA region and central Asia must play an active role, Tardy advises, and a harmonious dialogue between local authorities, academia, industry and the public is essential. ‹‹‹ Read less

“Our technique is based on two scientific discoveries,” he writes in The Innovation. “One is that granular constraints determine the mechanical states of a granular material. The other is the relationship between the mechanical properties and the ecological attributes of soil. Sand is turned into ‘soil’ by imposing an omni-directional integrative constraint. The single discrete state of sand is converted into two mechanical states of soil — a rheological state when wet and a solid state when dry — simply by mixing sand with a constraining material.”

The team’s “constraining material”? Modified sodium carboxymethyl cellulosic material or cellulose gum, a common food additive used to thicken or stabilize. It gives the sand the ability to switch between two mechanical states in an endless cycle. This switching ability allows the sand to retain water. Add nutrients and you have instant soil.

Soilization is as simple as churning cellulose into the top layer of desert sand, about 15 centimeters thick, and adding fertilizer. It is then ready for planting. Even better – once soilized, that’s it. The sand is soilized permanently.

“The whole process is simple and fast, applicable for large scale use,” Yi says. “A local biodiverse ecological environment has formed in the Ulan Buh desert experiment. In addition to the kinds of plants growing exuberantly there, it also became home to different kinds of bids, mice, wild rabbits, frogs and worms.”
The 650 acres of soilized Ulan Buh Desert now houses 70 species of thriving plants, including sunflowers and tomatoes, and the biomass yield is generally higher than that grown in natural soil nearby with denser and longer roots. Plus, the pilot project showed that the soilized sand has increasingly better soil properties in the second and third year after planting.

Yi’s team has also been experimenting with its technique in the Sahara, Middle East, Tibet and beaches in China.

Sinai, Egypt

Dutch engineering company The Weather Makers, led by Ties van der Hoeven, has a 20-year plan to transform the Sinai Peninsula from the desert that connects Egypt and Asia to a green paradise.

The Sinai Peninsula is a 60,000-square-kilometer mix of desert, mountains and rocky terrain. It wasn’t always this way: Cave paintings in the region depict trees and plants. Geological and archeological research also suggests the Sinai was once covered by grass, trees and lakes.

CAPTION: “Solitization” helps sand retain water and become suitable for planting. This can involve adding cellulose and fertilizer IMAGES/GRAPHICS: Envato/Anas Albounni, KUST Review

John D. Liu is a visiting fellow at the Netherlands Institute of Ecology and a consultant on the Sinai team. He says the Sinai Peninsula looks like a beating heart when viewed from space, with arteries and veins flowing to nurture the body that is the surrounding lands:

“Dust has blown over the Sinai’s denuded landscape for so long that it is hard to imagine it as the biblical ‘Land of Milk and Honey,’ but satellite images and other evidence tell another story. Clues from geologic time, evolution and human history are all etched on the exposed soils. It is possible to see that rivers flowed through the Sinai over vast evolutionary time. Even now, there are periodic flash floods when, because of the degraded landscape, rain that would nurture the land flows immediately into the sea.”

Land without vegetation and the mechanical properties of soil can’t hold water. This is most easily seen in areas that experience drought and then heavy rain: Periods of aridity lead to dry and hardened land, affecting the soil’s ability to absorb rain. Just to compound the problem: When water rushes over land that can’t absorb it, it strips more soil away.

For the Sinai, this soil ended up at the bottom of Lake Bardawil. Lake Bardawil sits to the north of the peninsula, connected to the Mediterranean Sea by two inlets and is no longer the “abundant 40-meter-deep aquatic nursery” it used to be, Liu says. Now, its depth registers at under 2 meters, with hyper-saline warm water. But Van der Hoeven says there’s 2.5 billion cubic meters of silt down there, and this “vast reserve of nutrient-rich material is the solution to all the problems.”

CAPTION: Blaise Tardy-professor at Khalifa University; he has a Pd.D. in chemical and biomolecular engineering. 
A golden bioeconomy in the UAE-We can ensure food self-reliance and fight climate change

The UAE may already have what it needs to make the desert green. And what we need to use is biomass.

Biomass is anything living or once living that can create fertile soil where once there was just inert desert sand. This organic matter when added to the soil increases water retention and provide the nutrients necessary for plant life, including the required microbe populations for healthy soils. Read more›››

Currently, ideas for generating biomass in arid regions include vertical farming, aquaculture (fish farms) and alternative strategies (for example: insect farms, precision fermentation or mushroom farms), all of which generate their own streams of residual organic matter. In the long-term, the UAE’s rich shore ecosystems may also prove useful in generating raw biomass.

CAPTION: More farming creates more organic residue, building a positive feedback loop leading to food security, regreening the desert and reducing the needs to import fertilizers and clays. INFOGRAPHICS: Anas Albounni, KUST Review

We can also tap into waste biomass. Untapped sources of biomass in the UAE are typically landfilled. These include municipal trimmings, kitchen wastes and post-consumer wastes. The UAE in 2020 imported 3.5 times more biomass than it exported. Moreover, in 2019, over 80 percent of food consumed was imported. But 40 to 80 percent of food imports are typically not consumed, representing a substantial yearly influx of biomass.

Collecting waste biomass, processing it via custom infrastructures and redistributing it across multiple farming strategies may be the first step to increasing bioeconomical activities. Because more farming would mean more organic residues, this would generate a positive feedback loop toward food security and regreening desert areas as well as reduce the amount of fertilizers and clays imported every year.

Although challenging, an effective bioeconomy in arid areas such as the UAE would also reduce CO2 by cutting import-related carbon emissions; increasing plant and animal life; encouraging long-term water retention in soils; and sequestering carbon on a vast scale. The potential for carbon fixation is enormous as up to 50 kilograms of organic carbon per square meter can be stored permanently in rehabilitated soil.

Considering that 50 million square kilometers globally are at least semi-arid, land could potentially store more carbon than humans have produced in the post-industrial era.

The biggest challenge to this green revolution: Financial benefits will be delayed.

Therefore, a careful bond between business planning and sustainable long-term developments spanning decades, which should include a fit-for-purpose education, is critically required.

A true valuation of healthy soils and trees as (very) long-term assets would also be paramount.‹‹‹ Read less

Again, the plan is low-tech: Dredge the lake and put that silt to good use as fertilizer. Increasing the amount of organic matter in the soil helps restore its ability to absorb water. This will also provide nutrient-rich soil for the plants that will regreen the desert.

Removing silt and deepening the lake will also make it cooler and less salty, improving the water quality and restoring the fish population. But Lake Bardawil will remain a salt lake, and the new plants in the desert need fresh water. Enter another low-tech innovation: the imaginatively named “eco machine.”

It’s a bunch of connected transparent plastic water barrels, developed and named by John Todd, creator of the New Alchemy Institute, a Massachusetts-based research community dedicated to sustainable living.

“An eco machine is basically a living technology,” Todd tells The Guardian. “They are solar-driven and reflect the aggregate experience of life on Earth over the last 3.5 billion years.”

Each barrel is a self-contained pond with all the algae, fish, salt-tolerant plants and insects a tiny ecosystem needs. The water flows from one barrel to the next, being filtered as it goes. In the system designed for the Sinai, salt water from Lake Bardawil goes in, and fresh water comes out.

It’s a small system but the Sinai team plans to use it in a network and at a much larger scale. The team believes it should take only five years or so for the regreening plants to start impacting the local climate.

“As the landscape of the Sinai regreens and retains more moisture, a stable hydrological cycle is predicted to return, thus improving conditions for further regreening and agriculture, and by, extension, economic and political stability in the face of anticipated population pressure.”

While any regreening program can proceed only as fast as a plant can grow, there are quicker ways to make deserts fertile again.

While the Kubuqi team used plants to reintroduce nutrients to the soil, a more direct route is possible.

Dubai, UAE

The International Center for Biosaline Agriculture, headquartered in Dubai, has spent nearly two decades researching how plants survive in the type of ecosystems where water and soil quality are low. It has developed techniques that build on ancient farming practices in the desert.

One such technique is turning date palm waste into biochar. There are plenty of date palm plantations in the UAE, and the residual product can be burned into a charcoal to add to the soil. This introduces carbon, a critical element for plant life.

Desert Control is a Dubai-based start-up looking to take the process of regreening from years to hours. The team says its liquid nano-clay (LNC) can turn desert sand into fertile soil ready for seeding and planting in about seven hours. The process is constrained by the rate of crop growth, but the treatment is applied directly on top of the sand and lasts up to five years.


Give me agriculture and I will give you civilization.

H.H. Sheikh Zayed bin Sultan al Nahyan


“Our invention is a new way of mixing clay and water so when it is distributed to the soil, it envelops each sand grain perfectly and spreads in the sand – in one go,” according to the company’s website. “When LNC is applied, the sand turns into a sponge-like fabric that retains moisture and holds the nutrients in the soil much better. You need less water for irrigation and the crop gets more nutrients and grows better.”

Adding clay to the sand creates micropores and increases surface tension. The soil then acts like a net, preventing water and nutrients from seeping away from roots.

Dubai company Dake Rechsand has a technique that works in a similar way, using “breathable sand” that helps desert sand retain water around the roots but still allow air to flow freely. The change in surface tension creates a pool of water on the surface that can slowly be absorbed by plant roots rather than disappearing as water does when poured onto normal sand.

Adding bacteria and fungi into desert sediments also helps create a stronger network of water and nutrients to sustain plants.

We can regreen the desert – but should we?

Afforestation programs in India introduced the invasive Prosopis juliflora shrub to regreen the Thar Desert, and so many Populus and Salix trees were planted in the Ladakh region that a Guinness World Record was achieved. These rapid changes come at a cost, however. In 2019, millions of locusts devastated the greenery across the African and Asian deserts. In India, 170,000 hectares of farms were infested. Pakistan declared a national emergency. The U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization called it a calamity.

Ninad Mungi, research scholar with the Wildlife Institute of India, squarely blames “prolonged rainfall in the deserts.”
“We know that locust outbreaks follow years when plentiful rains brought greenery to the deserts,” says Mungi, who completed his Ph.D. at the Wildlife Institute of India and works at Aarhus University, Denmark, focusing on environmental-management strategies for controlling invasive plants and restoring native ecosystems.

“This species remains dormant in the hot years and swarms only when the deserts turn green. Now imagine if the rains and productions are higher every year. Not just higher but spatially contiguous with farming and plantations,” he says. “It provides a homogenous bountiful resource for locusts to recur more frequently. Did we cook the perfect recipe for this green tragedy?”

Regreening deserts will have profound effects on the planet. Functional, biodiverse ecosystems sequester carbon. In a world looking to transition to a zero-carbon future, locking the atmospheric carbon dioxide into plant life seems the ultimate carbon-capture proposal. But deserts also play a crucial role in balancing the planet’s climate, reflecting up to 30 percent of solar radiation back into space in a process known as albedo. The 70 percent that isn’t reflected sticks around for a short while as heat, but two-thirds of that is emitted back into space as the dry air and clear skies can’t hold it in. This is another key mechanism for cooling the planet that could be affected by increasing vegetation in desert areas.

The team behind the audacious plan to regreen the Sinai says a regreened Sinai Peninsula could significantly alter weather patterns across the wider region: “At present, in summer, the hot, dry Sinai draws moisture-laden north-westerly winds from the Mediterranean out into the Indian Ocean, where it fuels extreme weather events. A cooler, moister Sinai would reverse the direction of these winds, distributing this moist Mediterranean air more locally. This would result in dramatically increased precipitation to surrounding areas such as eastern Egypt, western Saudi Arabia, Jordan, and beyond.”

The team recognizes that any restoration action “must assess the feasibility of intentionally inducing ecological regime shifts and the associated (regional and global) impacts of doing so.”

The question is: If we regreen the Sinai, the Kubuqi, the Rub’ al Khali, what implications will that have for other areas of the world? And can we make those choices without input from the people who will be unintentionally affected? In the Sinai plan, for example, moisture that would have been funneled toward the Indian Ocean should fall as rain across the Middle East and North Africa, but how much would the ecosystems and communities used to getting this rain miss it?

The Sinai team has an answer:

“Like no other, we are aware of the unorthodoxy of regreening desert regions, but rather than be paralyzed by uncertainty, we have joined forces with academics, ecologists and engineers all over the globe to conceive a science-informed, holistic and long-term approach for restabilizing the local ecosystem to its old state – one that is fully biofunctional and regenerative.”

As you might expect, Liu, consultant on the Sinai project, has a similar outlook: “What if this capacity to create change at enormous scale tempered by consciousness and mutual benefit is exactly what [is] needed?”

HYDROGEN: The future fuel for aviation?

In June 2023, Rowan Atkinson – the versatile English actor, comedian and writer – authored an opinion piece for the Guardian casting doubt on the environmental benefits of electric vehicles (EVs) powered by lithium-ion batteries.

Listen to the Deep Dive:

While the arguments and studies he based his arguments on have been debunked, he rightly argued for more focus on hydrogen-powered vehicles.

It, however, is too early for hydrogen vehicles since there currently are just 72,000 hydrogen-fueled vehicles on the planet. In comparison to the 14 million EVs sold the previous year alone, the hydrogen-vehicle numbers pale. It, however, is indisputable that hydrogen-fuelled vehicles will be one of the major players in the times to come.

Intelligent Energy, a start-up in Leicestershire, U.K., has started to roll off the hydrogen fuel cell units capable of powering cars, trucks and buses. BMW is heavily invested in hydrogen-powered vehicles and has started delivering its iX5 hydrogen vehicles to select partners in Europe, the U.S. and Asia. While the hydrogen-vehicle future is already here, there has been a keen interest in hydrogen as a fuel for the aviation industry.

The aviation industry is a vital part of global transportation and economic growth but its heavy dependence on fossil fuels and thereby greenhouse gas emissions is a severe problem.

Mudasir A. Yatoo, Ph.D.

—Research associate in the Materials Department at Imperial College London and freelance consultant at Outsmart Insight.

In order to tackle these challenges, hydrogen as a fuel is emerging as a promising solution.

One of the primary motivations for exploring hydrogen as an aviation fuel is its potential to reduce carbon emissions. When combusted, hydrogen produces only water vapor as a by-product, presenting a pathway to mitigate the aviation industry’s carbon footprint.

Hydrogen for aviation comes with benefits including environmental sustainability; energy efficiency; versatility in terms of production and scalability; and synergy with other renewable energy sources such as wind and solar energy.

Fuel cells and hydrogen storage systems are two such technologies that have the potential to provide the necessary energy density and power output for commercial aviation.

The ability to store significant energy in a small space is vital for long-range flights and heavy payloads. The energy content per unit mass of hydrogen is 120 MJ/kg, the highest, but its volumetric energy density is very low because of its exceptionally low density at ordinary temperature and pressure conditions.

Although hydrogen’s energy density per unit volume is lower than traditional jet fuels, advancements in fuel cell and storage technologies are making it increasingly feasible for commercial aviation.

However, major challenges in infrastructure, technological advancement and safety remain. Establishing a strong hydrogen infrastructure including the availability of hydrogen at airports worldwide is one such key challenge.

Developing and integrating hydrogen storage, transportation and refueling infrastructure into existing airports are crucial.

Hydrogen is highly flammable and requires careful handling to ensure safety. Adequate safety measures and regulations and learning lessons from existing hydrogen applications, such as fuel cell vehicles appear to be the way forward.

Therefore addressing safety concerns and public perception surrounding hydrogen in aviation should be prioritized.

Furthermore, a concerted effort is required: Collaboration among government bodies, industry stakeholders and research institutions is necessary.

The road to the hydrogen-based aviation industry is long, but world governments’ policy support and funding with a clear focus on emissions-reduction targets could very well catalyze the transition sooner than later.

Mudasir A. Yatoo, Ph.D., is a research associate in the Materials Department at Imperial College London and freelance consultant at Outsmart Insight.