Member LoginMember Login - User registration - Setup as front page - Add to favorites - Sitemap More productive land being used for urban development, study finds !

More productive land being used for urban development, study finds

Time:2024-05-21 19:33:16 source:Planet Pulse news portal

Study funds jump in amount of productive land being used for urban development and increase in amount of highly erodible land.

A view of the lower Wanganui River in South Westland showing the line of silt and debris left from where the river broke breached a stop bank and flowed across farmland towards Lake Ianthe, in the distance. Much of that farmland is reclaimed riverbed.

Five percent of the country's soil is highly erodible, the majority of that in the North Island. Photo: Supplied / West Coast Regional Council

Related information
  • Supreme Court declines to hear challenge to Maryland ban on rifles known as assault weapons
  • China, Vietnam hold 8th border defense friendship exchange
  • Iraqi Shiite militia claims drone attack on Israeli
  • Prompt admission of Palestine into UN is a move to rectify historical injustice: Chinese FM
  • French sports minister calls for sanctions after Monaco player tapes over anti
  • Ricky Stenhouse Jr. signs multiyear extension with JTG Daugherty Racing for NASCAR Cup Series
  • Asian American Literature Festival that was canceled by the Smithsonian in 2023 to be revived
  • Iran reiterates commitment to IAEA cooperation
Recommended content
  • Nuggets blow 20
  • Chinese embassy urges US, UK and Australia to stop forming exclusionary blocs
  • Kremlin says Middle East tensions benefit no one
  • China's courier sector sees surge in parcel handling
  • A warrant for Netanyahu’s arrest was requested. But no decision was made about whether to issue it
  • Lawmakers in Serbia elect new government with pro