FAO in North America

New expert panel reports

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on July 18, 2012

Credit  ©FAO/Giulio NapolitanoThe Committee on World Food Security, the UN forum for reviewing and following up on policies concerning world food security, has just issued two reports prepared by its High-Level Panel of Experts.

Food security and climate change urges every country to develop its own strategy to manage climate change and risks. The coping capacity of the poor will have to be strengthened, since poor nations and the poor in all countries will be the first and hardest hit by adverse changes in climate, the report says. Action will be needed to safeguard the lives and livelihoods of coastal communities. Countries will also have to be prepared, where necessary, to resettle “climate refugees”.

The report says that food production has to be insulated to the extent possible from climate change impacts, especially in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, which are among the most vulnerable regions to changes in temperature and precipitation and also the regions with the highest rates of malnutrition.

Social protection for food security recommends that all countries design and implement a comprehensive legally empowered social protection system to provide every citizen an opportunity for a productive and healthy life. It notes that whereas families and communities used to look after their most vulnerable members, now governments are assuming the responsibility for providing appropriate social protection measures to prevent poverty-induced hunger.

At the global level, the report recommends that the Committee on World Food Security help in bringing out an Annual Social Protection Monitor, which would provide data on the steps taken in different countries to achieve the goal of sustainable food security through a rights and life-cycle approach to entitlements. Indicators to measure the impact of social safety net programmes should include a gender audit as well, the report says.

Read more: Food security and climate change | Social protection for food security

Rural women’s voices: Rose Cunningham Kain

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on March 26, 2012

Rose Cunningham Kain is Executive Director of Wangki Tangni, a women’s community development organization run by and for indigenous peoples on Nicaragua’s Atlantic coast.

A panelist at FAO’s side event, “Unleashing rural women’s voice to end hunger and poverty” during the Committee on the Status of Women in New York earlier this month, Rose provided her perspective on the needs of rural women:

Climate-smart agriculture and green growth – can ICT help?

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on March 5, 2012

©FAO/Hoang Dinh NamThe World Bank, FAO and the e-Agriculture community invite you to explore how information and communication technologies (ICT) can support “green growth” and climate-smart agriculture.

This is the second in a series of discussions following the publication of the World Bank’s “ICT in Agriculture” Sourcebook, responding to the growing demand for knowledge on how to use ICTs to improve agricultural productivity and raise smallholder incomes.

The current forum, which runs from 5-16 March, will look at how ICTs are being used to make farming practices more environmentally sustainable.

Do you have experiences to share on how ICTs are helping improve soil management and land use planning? Or examples of how mobile phones are being used to get climate-smart agriculture information or data to farmers?

Join the discussion.

FAO @ COP17

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on November 28, 2011

A Wall Street Journal blog post today highlighted an open letter from FAO and its partners calling on negotiators at the COP17 climate talks in Durban, South Africa, to recognise the important role of agriculture in addressing climate change and approve a Work Program for the agriculture sector under the Subsidiary Body for Scientific and Technological Advice.

The coalition of agricultural organizations are also organizing an Agriculture and Rural Development Day on 3 December  to share best practices on climate-smart agriculture and show how agriculture is part of the climate solution.

Tomorrow, 29 November, FAO will be hosting “climate-smart knowledge day” in Durban. Check in at FAO’s Climate Change blog for regular updates from Durban.

Report charts pathway to tackling hunger and climate change

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on November 21, 2011

A new report issued in the run up to the next round of UN climate negotiations in Durban, South Africa, later this month, lays out key policy responses to the global challenge of feeding a world faced with climate change, rapid population growth, poverty, food price spikes and degraded ecosystems.

“Business as usual in our globally interconnected food system will not bring us food security and environmental sustainability,” says the report, Achieving food security in the face of climate change – a summary for policy makers from the Commission on Sustainable Agriculture and Climate Change, an international group of experts convened by the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research.

The report’s recommendations include significant increases in global investment in sustainable agriculture and food systems over the next decade; sustainably intensifying agricultural production while reducing greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture; and reducing losses and waste in the food system.

No small challenge, according to Sir John Beddington, the UK’s chief scientific adviser and chair of the Commission:

“It’s about reorienting the whole global food system – not just agricultural production, and not just in developing countries. We need a socially equitable, global approach to produce the funding, policy, management and regional initiatives that will deliver nutrition, income and climate benefits for all.”

The Commission’s final report, upon which the recommendations are based, will be released early in 2012.

Adapting to grow

Submitted by Rachel Friedman on November 15, 2011

In light of the 17th Conference of the Parties to the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC COP17) at the end of this month in Durban, South Africa, considerable attention is focused on measures to mitigate the effects of rising atmospheric greenhouse gases. But many people, particularly farmers, are already experiencing the impacts of increasing temperatures and changes in precipitation.

Oxfam International (as part of its GROW campaign) and Kulima Integrated Development Solutions conducted a survey of farmers in Zambia, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Malawi and South Africa about their observations of changes in climate. Presented in a new policy-practice report, the results highlight the elevated risk of poor yields and crop failures that farmers in Southern Africa now face. At the same time, farmers are being “as resourceful, enterprising and experimental as possible” to change agricultural practices and diversify livelihoods in order to respond to these climatic and other associated environmental and economic stressors. The report offers recommendations in terms of policy, funding, and technical capacity for COP17 and beyond.

Hot spots are hotspots for food insecurity

Submitted by Rachel Friedman on June 9, 2011

A new study by the Climate Change, Agriculture, and Food Security (CCAFS) program of the CGIAR overlays regions of the world suffering from hunger and issues related to food security with climate change vulnerability data. This work should help identify and prioritize areas particularly vulnerable to food problems in the face of climate change, and determine adaptation measures appropriate for the challenges ahead.



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