Land restoration is the process of rebuilding the health, productivity, and biodiversity of land that has been degraded, damaged, or destroyed by human activity or natural processes. This includes recovering soil quality, replanting native vegetation, restoring waterways, and reestablishing ecosystems that support biodiversity and human livelihoods.
Land restoration is not simply about planting trees. It encompasses a wide range of approaches tailored to local contexts, from restoring degraded farmland and dryland ecosystems to rehabilitating wetlands and coastal landscapes.
Source: UNCCD, UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration (2021–2030)
Ecosystem restoration is the process of assisting the recovery of an ecosystem that has been degraded, damaged, or destroyed. It is a broader term that includes the restoration of forests, wetlands, grasslands, coral reefs, rivers and terrestrial ecosystems, of which land restoration is a key component.
The United Nations declared 2021-2030 the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration, recognising ecosystem restoration as essential for achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), the Paris Agreement on climate change and the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework.
Source: UNEP, UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration
Land degradation affects more than 3.2 billion people worldwide and costs the global economy an estimated USD 10.6 trillion per year in lost ecosystem services. Restoring degraded land offers a triple win: it addresses the climate crisis, the biodiversity crisis and the food security crisis simultaneously.
Key reasons land restoration matters:
Source: UNCCD, IPBES Land Degradation Assessment 2018
Land degradation is the reduction or loss of the biological or economic productivity of land. It is caused by a combination of human activities, including overgrazing, deforestation, unsustainable agriculture, urban expansion, and pollution as well as natural processes such as erosion and drought.
Land degradation is one of the greatest environmental challenges of our time. Approximately 75% of the Earth’s ice-free land surface has already been significantly altered by human activity, and this continues to accelerate.
These terms are related but distinct:
In practice, many projects blend both approaches, depending on the condition of the land, local needs, and available resources.
Land Degradation Neutrality (LDN) is a global target under the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) that aims to ensure that the amount of healthy and productive land remains stable or increases over time. In other words, any new land degradation should be counterbalanced by an equivalent area of land being restored elsewhere.
LDN is one of the key frameworks within which the G20 Global Land Initiative operates, and it aligns with SDG Target 15.3.
Source: UNCCD
The G20 Global Land Initiative (GLI) is an international cooperation program that supports G20 countries and partners in scaling up efforts to restore degraded land, combat desertification, and achieve land degradation neutrality. It was established under the G20 and is implemented in close partnership with the UNCCD.
The GLI works across several areas:
The GLI is a platform for global land restoration partnerships, bringing together governments, civil society, the private sector, academia, and local communities.
The G20, or Group of Twenty, is an international forum of the world’s major economies. It brings together 19 countries and the European Union, representing around 85% of global GDP, 75% of international trade, and two-thirds of the world’s population. The G20 addresses major global economic, environmental, and development challenges, including climate change, land degradation, and sustainable development.
The G20 Global Land Initiative is one of the G20’s flagship environmental cooperation initiatives, reflecting the G20’s commitment to addressing land degradation as part of broader goals for climate resilience and sustainable development.
Terrestrial ecosystems — forests, wetlands, grasslands, and soils — store vast quantities of carbon. When land is degraded, this carbon is released into the atmosphere as CO2, contributing to climate change. Restoring degraded land reverses this process: healthy soils and vegetation absorb and store carbon, making land restoration one of the most cost-effective natural climate solutions available.
Land restoration also builds climate resilience by stabilising soils against erosion, regulating water cycles, reducing the risk of droughts and floods, and protecting agricultural systems from climate shocks.
The UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration (2021–2030) is a global initiative led by the United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) and the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). It aims to prevent, halt, and reverse the degradation of ecosystems worldwide, with a goal of restoring 1 billion hectares of land by 2030.
The Decade is aligned with the Sustainable Development Goals, the Paris Agreement, and the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework. The G20 Global Land Initiative is an active contributor to the goals of the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoration.
Source: UNEP, FAO
Land restoration is happening at scale across the world. Some notable examples including global organisations and communities are:
Efforts are underway for countless other small-medium-large scale projects. The G20 GLI documents and shares best practices in land restoration from G20 countries and partner nations.
The private sector is increasingly recognised as essential to scaling up land restoration globally. Business models built on sustainable land management, from regenerative agriculture and sustainable forestry to ecosystem services markets and blended finance mechanisms are creating what is often called the restoration economy.
The G20 GLI actively promotes private sector land restoration investment and works with businesses, investors, and entrepreneurs to identify land restoration investment opportunities and sustainable land business models. The GLI’s Restoration Returns grants program provides funding to civil society organisations and supports community-led restoration projects that can attract further private investment.
Youth engagement in ecosystem restoration is central to the G20 GLI’s work. Young people are not only the most affected by land degradation and climate change, they are also among the most innovative and committed actors driving solutions.
The GLI’s Generation Restoration Dialogues series brings together young environmental leaders, ecopreneurs, and innovators for global conversations on land and climate solutions. The Trigger Change! University courses on sustainable agriculture and urban land restoration equip students with practical tools for addressing land degradation in their communities and careers.
Through youth ecopreneurship programs and green economy initiatives, the GLI supports young innovators in building sustainable businesses and careers in the restoration sector.
The Rio Conventions are three legally binding international agreements that emerged from the 1992 Earth Summit: the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC), the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), and the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD). Together, they form the global policy framework for addressing climate change, biodiversity loss, and land degradation, all of which are deeply interconnected.
Land restoration contributes to targets under all three Rio Conventions. The G20 GLI works in close synergy with the UNCCD and supports countries in achieving their commitments under all three conventions simultaneously.
There are several ways to engage with the G20 Global Land Initiative:
The year 2024 was pivotal for the Global Land Initiative. Land degradation and restoration remained prominent on the global policy agenda throughout.
The UN Environmental Assembly, G7 Leaders’ Summit, G20 Environment and Climate Change Ministers’ meeting, and BRICS Leaders’ Summit addressed land degradation and committed to scaling up land restoration efforts.
The European Union passed a new Restoration Law mandating quantitative targets for land restoration. The UNFCCC, UNCBD and UNCCD Conferences of the Parties (COPs), held during the last quarter of the year, reinforced land restoration as a crucial solution to combat land degradation, biodiversity loss and climate change.
Building on this favorable policy momentum, the Global Land Initiative continued to develop and deliver a robust program. In collaboration with the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN), we completed a database on Global Restoration Commitments by countries under the UNCCD, UNCBD, UNFCCC and the Bonn Challenge.
Representing a significant increase in global commitments since 2021, the total global commitment now stands at 1.2 billion hectares, with 30 countries, including 11 G20 members, pledging to restore over 10 million hectares each.
The UNCCD, with financial support from the Global Land Initiative, published the first global restoration economy international report, titled, Investing in Land’s Future: Financial needs assessment for UNCCD. The report defines the private sector’s growing role in land restoration and its potential for creating green jobs.
The study outlines key recommendations to support the growth of the restoration economy, which has an associated market survey valued at $37 billion globally, growing at 8.2% annually and is projected to reach $70 billion by 2031. Together, these studies stressed the need for focused policy action to encourage private sector investment and engagement in the restoration economy.
Working with the International Trade Centre (ITC), the Global Land Initiative launched the first cohort of the “Global Ecopreneurs Program,” training 100 young entrepreneurs from restoration startups. These entrepreneurs received training on improving business plans and pitching to investors. We plan to scale this program regionally to reach 10,000 ecopreneurs by 2029.
Training remained a cornerstone of the Global Land Initiative, with programs on the restoration of mining areas, of urban lands, of lowland-based systems, of drylands and with biosaline agriculture. These trainings consistently attracted more applications than available slots. To accommodate this high demand and broader participation, we also conducted online webinars on these topics, in English, Arabic and French.
The first University Curriculum Course on Sustainable Agriculture for Land Restoration was launched this year. It reached over 400 university teachers, with over 100 trained on implementing the curriculum. A university module on urban land restoration is in its final stages.
Representatives from 25 countries attended the second Global Changemaker Academy for Parliamentarians held in Bonn. With the European Union Restoration Law’s passage, global best practices can now be discussed and adapted to national contexts.
The Global Land Initiative’s visibility surged with participation in the G20 Environment and Climate Change Working Group meetings in Brazil, the COPs of the UNCBD and UNCCD and 7 other international exhibitions. In December, the Initiative, in partnership with Germany’s Federal Museum of Arts and Sciences, opened the Save Land: United for Land Museum Exhibition, the first museum exhibition on land restoration, which will run until June 2025.
Online engagement grew, reaching over 35,000 newsletter subscribers and over 14,000 followers across social media platforms, and a global reach of nearly 400,000. The Global Photography Festival, which attracted 17,000 entries from 154 countries, further boosted visibility.
The Global Restoration Information Hub was launched in July 2024. It is a compilation of globally available data on land restoration from credible sources. The site provides information on global best practices, restoration commitments, best practice legislations, documentaries, restoration actors and other databases.
The Initiative issued a global call for communities and NGOs to submit their restoration projects for small grant support, receiving over 600 submissions from 100 countries. Forty-one projects from XX countries were selected for funding.
[Statement on faith, if the faith report is finalized]
The G20 Global Land Initiative Steering Committee was kept informed of developments through regular communication. It met in July and continues to provide guidance on program implementation. It received the work plan for 2025-26; an exciting period of action is ahead.
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