Litcius/Paper detail

Estimating the Economic Cost of Land Degradation and Desertification in Morocco

Anas Laamouri, Abdellatif Khattabi

2025Land9 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Desertification affects over 90% of Moroccan territory, leading to soil degradation that reduces agricultural productivity, diminishes biodiversity, and alters environmental functions. This study estimates the total economic cost of desertification in Morocco using a zonal approach based on regional sensitivity. The methodology includes two stages: quantifying productivity losses from water and wind erosion, salinization, overgrazing, silting of dams, carbon storage loss, and land-use changes; and monetizing impacts using methods such as productivity change, replacement cost, and the social cost of carbon. The total cost is estimated at USD 2.1 billion per year, with 78.02% from agricultural and grazing land productivity losses, 2.95% from dam silting, 18.47% from carbon storage loss, and 0.56% from land-use changes. These findings underscore the urgency of public policies, including land use planning, sustainable agriculture, irrigation modernization, and community engagement. Drawing on successful initiatives in the MENA region and globally, Morocco can mitigate desertification’s impacts and foster sustainable development.

Topics & Concepts

DesertificationLand degradationNatural resource economicsGeographyDegradation (telecommunications)Land useEnvironmental scienceEnvironmental resource managementEnvironmental protectionEconomicsComputer scienceAgricultureEcologyArchaeologyBiologyTelecommunicationsAfrican Botany and Ecology StudiesAgriculture and Rural Development ResearchRangeland Management and Livestock Ecology