https://www.unccd.int/news-stories/press-releases/un-meeting-review-glob...
Bonn/Panama City, 4 November 2025 – Representatives of 196 countries and the European Union will meet in Panama from 1-5 December 2025 to review their efforts against desertification, land degradation and drought under the United Nations Convention to Combat Desertification (UNCCD) — one of the three Rio Conventions, alongside biodiversity and climate.
he 23rd session of the Committee for the Review of the Implementation of the Convention (CRIC 23) to the UNCCD will convene some 500 delegates from governments, civil society, and academia to assess progress in advancing the Convention’s objectives.
A signatory to UNCCD since 1996, Panama has committed to achieve Land Degradation Neutrality by 2030, identified 31 critical hotspots, and is advancing reforestation and Dry Corridor adaptation programmes — underlining its role as regional host. In 2023, the country faced its driest year on record, when water shortages disrupted traffic through the Panama Canal and highlighted how local drought can trigger global consequences.
Juan Carlos Navarro, Minister of Environment of Panama, stated: “Never before has a country hosted, in the same year, the three major United Nations environmental conventions—on climate action, biodiversity, desertification, and sustainable land management. With this, Panama reaffirms its commitment to conserving nature and advancing sustainable development, while once again calling for the integrated management of these three pillars in order to confront the planetary crisis and build a resilient future for our communities.”
UNCCD Executive Secretary Yasmine Fouad said: “Severe droughts and the loss of fertile land are already straining food and energy production, uprooting rural communities, and threatening the livelihoods of millions. Nowhere is this more evident than in Latin America and the Caribbean, a region that is experiencing severe land degradation, affecting at least 20 per cent of its total area. By hosting CRIC23, Panama is placing itself at the center of collective response — from its national Nature Pledge to the regional Dry Corridor Initiative — and helping to build the momentum for the urgent need for drought resilience and land restoration worldwide.”
This CRIC will place particular emphasis on gender, highlighting best practices and bottlenecks in engaging women—including Indigenous women—who are among the hardest hit by land degradation and drought, yet remain at the forefront of sustaining families and food systems.
Recent UNCCD data underline the urgency: the world is losing nearly 100 million hectares of healthy land annually, and over 70 per cent of land has become drier over the past three decades, eroding the planet’s ability to support a growing population. Meeting global land restoration targets will require USD 1 billion per day until 2030—still only a fraction of what is currently spent on harmful subsidies and unsustainable investments.
CRIC23 will be held at the Panama Convention Center, Panama City. Parties will: review progress and provide recommendations towards drought resilience and 2030 global targets on land; discuss the post-2030 strategic framework; engage with key stakeholders including women, youth, Indigenous Peoples and local communities; and see the launch of the Panama Nature Pledge and other key reports.
Press Briefings: 12:00–13:00 (local time)
- 1 December: Opening press conference
Opening of CRIC23 with focus on the key expectations for the meeting and the launch of the Panama Nature Pledge on land, climate and biodiversity.
Speakers: UNCCD Executive Secretary Yasmine Fouad and Minister of Environment of Panama Juan Carlos Navarro.
- 2 December: Launch of Brief on Small Island Developing States (SIDS)
A new brief highlighting land and drought impacts and action in SIDS around the world, as the planet continues to warm.
Speakers: UNCCD and representatives from the Caribbean and the Pacific.
- 4 December: Launch of report on the Economics of Rangelands
Presentation of a landmark report on rangelands — vital for food security and climate stability but rapidly degrading despite covering 56 per cent of global land.
Speakers: Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ), UNCCD Chief Scientist Barron Orr, and regional experts.
December will also see the launch of the International Year of Rangelands and Pastoralists (IYRP), a milestone in the lead up to COP17 in Mongolia in August 2026.
- 5 December – Closing Press Release (World Soil Day)
Issued following the CRIC23 closing plenary and coinciding with World Soil Day. It will provide an overview of CRIC23 outcomes and their significance in the lead-up to UNCCD COP17 in Mongolia (August 2026)
3 December – Press Trip
Journalists are invited to join a field visit organized by the Panama Canal Authority (ACP) to farms in the Capira mountains showcasing sustainable land management practices. The tour will highlight:
- Agroforestry – integrating trees and crops
- Silvopastoral systems – combining trees, improved pastures, and good agricultural practices
- Family farming – producing food sustainably
The visit will also include the Coffee Processing Plant of the Association of Coffee Growers of the Cirí and Trinidad Rivers (ACACPA), with opportunities to interview farmers, Ministry of Environment staff, and ACP representatives.
These initiatives demonstrate how environmental economic incentives support sustainable land management, improve rural livelihoods, and advance Land Degradation Neutrality goals.
ENDS






