Covering around 27 percent of the earth’s land surface, mountains 
play a critical role in moving the world towards sustainable economic 
growth. They not only provide sustenance and wellbeing to 720 million 
mountain people around the world, but indirectly benefit billions more 
living downstream.
In particular, mountains provide freshwater, energy and food – resources
 that will be increasingly scarce in coming decades. However, mountains 
also have a high incidence of poverty and are extremely vulnerable to 
climate change, deforestation, land degradation and natural disasters.
The challenge is to identify new and sustainable opportunities that can 
bring benefits to both highland and lowland communities and help to 
eradicate poverty without contributing to the degradation of fragile 
mountain ecosystems
.
    Commitment and will to  advance this cause were strengthened 
during the International Year of Mountains  in 2002, and mountains have 
gained an increasingly high profile on agendas at  all levels. 
      
The Year also led to the adoption of resolution 57/245,
 in which the General Assembly designated 11  December as International 
Mountain Day, and encouraged the international  community to organize 
events at all levels on that day to highlight the  importance of 
sustainable mountain development.
 
 
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