Uzbekistan plants millions of acres of forest where the Aral Sea once lay
Aral Sea afforestation has covered 1.7 million hectares of dried lakebed with saxaul trees and other desert-tolerant plants over the past five years, transforming what was once the world’s fourth-largest lake into a slowly recovering landscape. The work is led on the ground by Karakalpak communities, where women gather seeds each autumn and men join planting crews through the winter. A single mature saxaul shrub can hold back several tons of moving sand, shielding nearby towns from the toxic dust storms that have driven respiratory illness for decades. It’s an imperfect, weather-dependent effort — but a hopeful model for how nature-based restoration can heal landscapes that seemed beyond saving.







