A vision for transforming agriculture under climate change

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Bruce Campbell Director, CCAFS

Transcript of A vision for transforming agriculture under climate change

Page 1: A vision for transforming agriculture under climate change

Bruce Campbell

Director, CCAFS

Page 2: A vision for transforming agriculture under climate change

A vision for transforming agriculture under climate change

Page 3: A vision for transforming agriculture under climate change

Enabling policy

Two-way extension enabled by big data

Climate advisory services and early

warning

Strong farmer organisations and

networks

Index-based insurance

Climate-adapted and low-emission

technologies

Lower emissions in fields/ landscapes/

supply chains

Enabled business activity; significant

PPPsDriving

agricultural

transformation

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What is the Agriculture Advantage?

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The Land and Water Advantage• Solutions to maximize the productive use of water (e.g. solar

water pumps, rainwater harvesting) which enhance resilience.

• Drought, heat and pest tolerant varieties (e.g. potato and sweetpotato can now be developed in 4 years, and many mature in 90-100 days).

• Securing land and water rights to mobilize investment.

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The Gender Advantage

• Incentives for women improves household nutrition and food security.

• Feminization of agriculture can drive transformation – e.g. women are 43% of agricultural

laborers and over 60% in SSA, South Asia and Oceania)

• Increase in women’s participation can result in agricultural transformation, including faster and equitable economic growth.

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The Low Emissions Advantage

Urgent need for climate action and climate finance:

24% of emissions come from agriculture, yet

agriculture receives only 2.5% of public climate finance.

• Financing for climate change mitigation in agriculture is increasing, but at small scales.

• Many low emissions options improve:• Long-term agricultural

productivity• Incomes for farmers and

along value chain • Resilience

Agriculture NAMAs

Eco-business Fund

USD 20 USD 40USD 80

USD 160

USD 640

USD 1,500

2 34

5

6

GreenhouseJiko Cookstove Inputs Solar

Panel Cow

Climate-smart Lending Platform

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The Policy Advantage

• Engaging at the science-policy interface can supportoperationalization of policies and programs to deliver action on-the-ground.

• Multi-level—from community to national to global—and multi-sector—food-water-climate-energy-banking-ICT-finance-(among others) nexus.

I. Stock-taking II. Prioritizing interventions

IV. Informing design & implementation

III. Supporting piloting

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The Breeding Advantage• Many crops will suffer greatly from 2oC warming (e.g. 60% of bean

growing areas could become unsuitable this century).

• Crop breeding is at the front line of adapting agriculture to climate change– Global initiatives grounded in farmers needs can deliver climate-smart

varieties, given sufficient resources.

• Genetic resources form the backbone for adaptation, providing traits farmers need to confront heat, drought and changing pest/disease pressures.

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The Business Advantage

• For every $1 in ODA there is $24 in domestic private sector spent.

• Public Private Partnerships (PPPs) can scale up climate actions and improve livelihoods.

• Blending public and private finance can deliver greater impact.

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Gender transformation

Digital agriculture enabled by big data

Multi-sectoral actions

Strong farmer organisations and

networks

Business case for breeding for long-term adaptation

Climate-adapted and low-emission

technologies

Increase investment in climate actions in

agriculture

Enabled business activity; significant

PPPs Priorities for

realising the

agriculture

advantage

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Agriculture decision• “jointly address issues related to agriculture, including through

workshops and expert meetings”

• “Invites Parties ……. their views on elements to be included in the work …..starting with but not limited to the following :– Methods and approaches for assessing adaptation, adaptation co-

benefits and resilience; – Improved soil carbon, soil health and soil fertility … water

management; – Improved nutrient use and manure management– Improved livestock management systems– Socioeconomic and food security dimensions of climate change in the

agricultural sector

http://unfccc.int/resource/docs/2017/sbsta/eng/l24a01.pdf

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For more information: http://hdl.handle.net/10568/89192

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