WORLD
Africa must face climate change head on
Baku, September 17 (AZERTAC). Agriculture should be placed front and centre at upcoming meeting of UN Climate Change Convention
Farmers in Ethiopia observe an FAO-EU project aimed at preventing flooding during rains and making better use of surface waters.
14 September 2011, Johannesburg/Rome - FAO and African leaders are working together to move quickly to adopt a "climate-smart" approach to agriculture to fight the impacts of climate change and increasing scarcity of natural resources.
"Africa needs increased productivity in its agriculture and higher incomes in its rural areas, and rural communities and the agro-ecosystems on which they depend have to adapt to climate change and become more resilient to its impacts," Alexander
Mueller, FAO`s Assistant-Director General for Natural Resources, said in remarks at the conference "Climate Smart Agriculture: Africa - A Call to Action," convened by the Government of South Africa (13-14 September, Johannesburg).
"FAO together with its partners has developed the concept of `Climate-smart agriculture,` which offers a way to deal with these multiple challenges in a coherent and integrated way", he said.
The approach aims to sustainably increase agricultural productivity and build resilience to environmental pressures, helping farmers adapt to climate change, while at the same time reducing greenhouse gas emissions. This can be achieved through climate-smart practices that increase the organic soil matter and improve water-holding capacity. This also makes yields more resilient and reduces erosion, helping to mitigate climate change.
"Climate-smart agriculture includes proven practical techniques and approaches that can help achieve food security, climate change adaptation, and climate change mitigation," Mueller said.
"But more support is needed. We need further piloting and scaling-up of early action programs, we need to bring together finance and investment opportunities and make them available for developing countries. Agriculture and climate finance need to be addressed together," he added. "Handling one at a time is not going to be enough to meet these multiple challenges," he said.
Agriculture is the economic foundation of many sub-Saharan countries, employing about 60 percent of the region`s workforce and accounting for some 30 percent of gross domestic product.
But climate change may reduce crop yields substantially in sub-Saharan Africa by the 2050s. And some 650 million people in Africa are dependent on rain-fed agriculture in fragile environments that are vulnerable to water scarcity and environmental degradation.