Agriculture: Where Poverty Reduction, Food Security and Climate Change Intersect
Statement of Outcomes from Agriculture and Rural Development Day
12 December 2009, Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Copenhagen
A group of more than 300 policymakers, farmers and scientists meeting in Copenhagen today urged on negotiators at the United Nations Climate Change Conference to recognize agriculture’s vital role in climate change adaptation and mitigation.
The group strongly endorsed the proposed target of cutting greenhouse gas emissions to avoid a temperature increase of more than 2 degrees C. They stressed that reducing greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture is essential for achieving the target. Farmers and researchers are already finding climate change solutions. On that basis, the agricultural community intends to play a proactive role in actions aimed at reducing emissions, while increasing the productive capacity of agriculture through the development of sustainable practices.
Agriculture faces the challenge of nearly doubling food production in order to meet the food needs of a population expected to reach 9 billion by mid-century but without increasing the sector’s emissions. Across most of the tropics, agriculture will continue to face the enormous challenge of adapting to harsh and unpredictable growing conditions.
To meet the climate challenge, substantial additional financing and investment will be needed across the entire rural value chain. New investments must be handled transparently to ensure that adaptation and mitigation are not undermined by reduced support for global food security and rural development. In addition, new investment must be accessible to all stakeholders, including researchers and members of civil society, and especially to farmers and their associations.
Specifically, the group urged climate negotiators to agree on the early establishment of an agricultural work program under the Subsidiary Body for Scientific and Technological Advice (SBSTA).
Agriculture & Rural Development Day was organized by the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research, the Global Donor Platform for Rural Development, the Faculty of Life Sciences, the University of Copenhagen, the International Federation of Agricultural Producers, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, the International Fund for Agricultural Development, the Global Forum on Agricultural Research, and the Earth System Science Partnership.
This statement was also posted on the CGIAR climate blog. For photos, videos, and other live blog posts from Agriculture and Rural Development Day, please visit Rural Climate Exchange at http://cgiarclimatechange.wordpress.com/.
Agriculture: Where Poverty Reduction, Food Security and Climate Change Intersect
Statement of Outcomes from Agriculture and Rural Development Day
12 December 2009, Faculty of Life Sciences, University of Copenhagen
A group of more than 300 policymakers, farmers and scientists meeting in Copenhagen today urged on negotiators at the United Nations Climate Change Conference to recognize agriculture’s vital role in climate change adaptation and mitigation.
The group strongly endorsed the proposed target of cutting greenhouse gas emissions to avoid a temperature increase of more than 2 degrees C. They stressed that reducing greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture is essential for achieving the target. Farmers and researchers are already finding climate change solutions. On that basis, the agricultural community intends to play a proactive role in actions aimed at reducing emissions, while increasing the productive capacity of agriculture through the development of sustainable practices.
Agriculture faces the challenge of nearly doubling food production in order to meet the food needs of a population expected to reach 9 billion by mid-century but without increasing the sector’s emissions. Across most of the tropics, agriculture will continue to face the enormous challenge of adapting to harsh and unpredictable growing conditions.
To meet the climate challenge, substantial additional financing and investment will be needed across the entire rural value chain. New investments must be handled transparently to ensure that adaptation and mitigation are not undermined by reduced support for global food security and rural development. In addition, new investment must be accessible to all stakeholders, including researchers and members of civil society, and especially to farmers and their associations.
Specifically, the group urged climate negotiators to agree on the early establishment of an agricultural work program under the Subsidiary Body for Scientific and Technological Advice (SBSTA).
Agriculture & Rural Development Day was organized by the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research, the Global Donor Platform for Rural Development, the Faculty of Life Sciences, the University of Copenhagen, the International Federation of Agricultural Producers, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, the International Fund for Agricultural Development, the Global Forum on Agricultural Research, and the Earth System Science Partnership.
This statement was also posted on the CGIAR climate blog. For photos, videos, and other live blog posts from Agriculture and Rural Development Day, please visit Rural Climate Exchange at http://cgiarclimatechange.wordpress.com/.