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https://dfid.blog.gov.uk/2011/12/08/the-importance-of-agriculture-and-innovation/

The importance of agriculture and innovation

Posted by: , Posted on: - Categories: Climate Change, Development Debates, Nutrition

As the world gathers in Durban to continue discussions on how best to avoid the impacts of climate change, last Saturday, several UN organisations and others hosted the Agriculture and Rural Development Day. I gave a keynote presentation, sharing a platform with Rachel Kyte, Vice President of the World Bank, and Dr Mary Robinson, former President of Ireland and United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights. The Secretary of State for Defra, Caroline Spelman MP, also took part in a High Level Panel. The event was focused on the complex link between food security, agriculture and climate change, and how we can best adapt to and mitigate against climate change, achieve food security and reduce poverty.

Researchers at the International Rice Research Institute (IRRI) inspect salt-tolerant rice plants. Picture: IRRI

Agriculture directly provides livelihoods for millions of the poorest and most vulnerable people around the world. It provides food for rapidly growing populations; energy for cooking and for transport; raw materials for industry; and is a vital source of foreign exchange for many developing countries. The challenges of food insecurity, climate change, increased competition for energy, water, and land, and degradation of land and biodiversity  are connected in complex ways. Boosting productivity and production are essential if we are to meet the increase in the demand for food as the world population approaches the estimated nine billion mark in 2050, as projected by the recently published Government Office for Science Foresight report, The Future of Food and Farming.

Rising annual temperatures and changes in rainfall patterns will affect agriculture globally, reducing harvests for smallholder farmers. Extreme weather events - like the 2010 Pakistan floods and the current drought in the Horn of Africa - are likely to become more frequent. As we've seen over the past few years, these can have a devastating effect on the livelihoods of poor people who depend on farming.

As a global community we need to manage the world food system in a way that provides food security for everyone without damaging the environmental resources we all depend on. It's a task that will be made more challenging in a world increasingly affected by climate change. The impact will be most heavily felt in developing countries, without the resources to adapt to climate change. Without a global commitment to reducing greenhouse gas emissions from all sectors, including agriculture, no amount of agricultural adaptation will be sufficient under the destabilized climate of the future.

Developing "climate-smart" agriculture, which is more resilient and more productive, is the challenge we all face in the coming decades.

Developing saline-tolerant rice varieties at the Central Soil Salinity Research Institute in Karnal, India. Picture: IRRI

The task of the Commission on Sustainable Agriculture and Climate Change (of which I am Chair) has been to identify policy options and practical actions we can take to help make agriculture climate-smart, as set out in the "Achieving Food Security in the Face of Climate Change" report. Two key recommendations are to increase investment in research and development in agriculture and in food systems, and to integrate food security and sustainable agriculture fully into national and international policies. The waste and losses in the food system must be reduced – both good food thrown out in developed countries; and crops lost to insects or fungi attacks after harvest in developing countries. The amounts lost are staggeringly high: up to 30% globally.

Around the world there are many, many examples of best practice and success where resilience and productivity have increased, and resource inputs and greenhouse gas emissions have been reduced. Some projects supported by UK aid which demonstrate this include:

  • The development of a variety of rice which is tolerant to salt in the soil. This has helped large numbers of farmers in coastal areas of Bangladesh to grow crops on salty lands and ensure food supplies all year round;
  • The adoption of conservation farming techniques on nearly two million hectares of farming land in India to enable quick and easy sowing of wheat after rice crops. This technique removes the need to till the soil which allows more efficient and sustainable use of soil and water and contributes to increasing farmers' yearly incomes;
  • The production and distribution of localised weather bulletins, which help farmers to tailor their crop planting and management techniques to local climate conditions, thus improving harvests.

The report identifies many others. Getting greater international attention to address the complex links between climate change and agriculture is something I feel needs to be urgently addressed. And the importance of continuously searching for innovative solutions to help us do this can never be overstated.

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Please note, this is a guest blog. Views expressed here do not necessarily represent the views of DFID or have the support of the British Government.

More from DFID on climate change, its impact and how UK aid is helping millions of people to protect their livelihoods from the effects of climate change:

Forests, food and fuel: find out how UK aid is helping poor countries to adapt to the world's changing climate.

Dangerous climate change: listen to the DFID podcast from Kevin Anderson on the impacts of going beyond a 2-degree rise in temperature

The Climate Change Group blog: read posts from DFID staff who work in the area of climate change

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4 comments

  1. Comment by What We Are Reading 09/12/2011 « Do No Harm posted on

    [...] The Importance of Agriculture and Innovation LD_AddCustomAttr("AdOpt", "1"); LD_AddCustomAttr("Origin", "other"); [...]

  2. Comment by Rachel Kasumba posted on

    John, research and innovation are both crucial for long-term sustainability but are often underfunded or completely ignored in the pursuit of short-term focused development.

    Food security is a basic need and programs targeted to ensuring that Agriculture is not neglected are commendable and should be encourage everywhere especially in developing and poor countries where the focus has shifted to Western Style lifestyles at the expense of indigenous farming which fetches very little income. Policy changes that encourage better earning, training to arm subsistence farmers with knowledge to survive in the current times, modern ways of farming, and the need for people to focus on what they are good at rather than the current trend will also go a long way to improving food availability and earning for those engaged in farming.

  3. Comment by Michael Collier posted on

    Apparently China is tackling the issues of climate change and agriculture by artificially increasing the amount of rain fall by 10% by 2015 to increase it's crop production. I'm not sure what your thoughts are on that John?

    Source: http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2011-12/china-aims-modify-weather-producing-more-rain-produce-more-crops

  4. Comment by James A. Singmaster, III, Ph.D. posted on

    The key for avoiding a melt down of humanity is making our organic wastes, especially biowastes, into a resource. Biowastes are massive ever-expanding messes from which toxics, germs and drugs are escaping that will eventually poison humankind off earth if we don't start getting control of biowastes soon. Also all the processing waste getting food to the table and our excreta loaded with toilet paper going to sewage are mostly cellulose that we let get biodegraded to reemit trapped CO2 and energy needlessly. Our biowastes are an already harvested biofuel supply system that can be pyrolyzed to get charcoal and an espelled fuel mix that could go through a turbogenerator to have electricity as well as fuel generated without fossil or nuclear energy and their waste problems being involved. Billions of $$$s lost in the mishandling of organic wastes could become billions of $$$s in profits including greatly reduced costs and environmental damage from mishandling of organic wastes.
    I have posted many comments with more details on various blog postings including NRDC's Switchboard and NYTimes Green and Dotearth. Where we need innovation for the future is first realizing that the past may be sneaking up on us with the never-ending organic wastes messes overwhelming our children's futures.
    James. Singmaster,III, Ph.D., Environmental Chemist, Ret., Fremont, CA. USA