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Quick Time™ and a decompressor are needed to see this picture. Patrick Worms Senior Science Policy Adviser 33 rue du Progrès 1410 Waterloo, Belgium Phone: +32 495 24 46 11 Email: [email protected] Address Waterloo, 23 June 2017 Food security and climate change –0 draft consultation paper Page 9, paragraph 2: “Small-scale farming operations play several critical roles in addressing the needs of vulnerable populations. They “feed poor communities – including themselves” along with the majority of the world population (IAASTD. 2008: 22). They manage a sizeable share of the agricultural land, employ a large share of the poorer working community, provide access to food at the local and the regional level, and have less harmful environmental impacts when using appropriate agricultural systems. Thus small-scale farming must play a major role today in addressing the challenges of climate change.” Page 9, paragraph 3: “We know too little about how crops and livestock growth and management practices change with scale to identify global patterns consistently, but the evidence shows that small-scale farms are more likely to engage in mixed crop and livestock agriculture that includes trees, which are likely to be more resilient to climate change. On the other hand, small-scale operations are less likely to have access to extension services, markets for new inputs and seeds, and loans to finance operations. Gaining a better understanding of the differences in farm activities, and vulnerability to climate change is critical, both to finding ways to improve food security and to deal with the climate change challenges to agricultural productivity and stability.” Page 11, paragraph 3: “1.4.3 Availability -- Food availability begins on millions of farms around the world. Farmers use land, their family labor and possibly that of others, and various kinds of annuals, livestock, trees, and tools to manage the process of producing food. They choose what to produce based on the natural resources at their disposal (including soil quality and weather), the inputs they have access to (both previous investments such as irrigation systems and current inputs such as seed and animal varieties), and the market situation they face. Some portion of what they produce is transported off the farm, either by farmers themselves or traders transporting it to processors or to intermediate or final markets. According to FAO (FAOSTAT, 2010), the number of people working in agriculture grew from 2.5 billion in 2000 to 2.6 billion in 2010 with the share of total population in agriculture declining from 42 percent to 28 percent. Global averages conceal great differences across countries. As a general rule, the share of the population working” Page 12, paragraph 2: “1.4.3.1 Biological effects of climate change on crops, livestock, and agricultural systems -- Systematic studies of the effects of changes in temperature and precipitation across the range of crops, trees, livestock, and fish are in their infancy and more research is needed to understand the consequences and identify promising avenues for productivity and resiliency enhancing investments. Crops respond most favourably to environments similar to those they evolved in – maize in Central America, potatoes in the Andes, wheat in the Middle East, rice in South Asia – and for the climate conditions in which they evolved. Breeding efforts extend the range of environmental possibilities, and that is especially true for crops that have substantial genetic diversity or the greatest commercial demand. In relation to climate change, considerably more research has been done on its effects on grains than on roots, tubers or trees, horticultural crops and feed crops, and there is much more information available on its impacts in temperate climes than in the tropics, and in land-based systems than in marine-based systems.” Page 18 – “1.5 Policy messages -- This section summarizes the policy messages from chapter 1. Programs and policies to deal with climate change must be part of efforts to reduce poverty and enhance food security. Attempts to address climate change vulnerability that are undertaken independently risk using resources inefficiently and losing opportunities for synergies. At the same time, climate change brings unique challenges that require modifications to existing food security programs. Improvements in productivity are essential to deal with food security challenges. Climate change necessitates research into crops, trees, livestock and systems that are resilient to extreme events. To address nutritional security in the face of climate change, more research is needed on fruit and vegetable productivity as climate changes. Food production systems are extremely diverse, both within individual countries and across national boundaries. Climate change will not affect all systems the same, hence the need to adopt a range of policy and program approaches. Small-scale farms account for a large share of global agricultural land use, rural employment, and often are operated by women. They are more likely to engage in mixed crop and livestock agriculture that includes trees, which are likely to be more resilient to climate change. On the other hand, small-scale operations are less likely to have access to extension services, markets for new inputs and seeds, and loans to finance operations. Policies that address the limits facing small-scale farmers, and that ensure women have opportunities for equal access to information and resources will have important productivity, resiliency and poverty-reducing benefits for food security generally and for dealing with climate change. Vulnerable communities face negative shocks (droughts, floods, crop failure) from climate change, the burden of food insecurity is likely to be borne disproportionately by women and girls and there are both efficiency and welfare reasons for targeting food security programs generally and climate-change-specific activities to women. The report of the HLPE on price volatility and food security (2011) has recommendations on how to manage food price volatility that will become ever more relevant as climate change effects become more pronounced. Inadequate information is available to deal effectively with many aspects of the food security challenges from climate change. We highlight two. - The biophysical effects of climate change on plant and animal productivity and stability of production, including the effects on pests and diseases that affect food production and post-harvest marketing system. Most information is available on the large staple crops, less on livestock (including fish), and even less on fruits , vegetables and trees. - How crops and livestock grown and management practices differ with scale and gender and will be affected by climate change.” - Page 22 paragraph 1: “The scenario uncertainties at global level are magnified at regional and local scales where individual adaptation decisions have the most impact. This represents a serious challenge to informed policy and decision making everywhere but especially for the world’s vast dryland regions where production systems are dependent on rainfall and which are home to many of the world’s most vulnerable. Appropriate adaptation strategies would differ significantly depending whether one needs to deal with likely more drought or flooding climate episodes. Page 25 – insert new paragraph after paragraph one: “(…) as partial adaptation to climate change. Evidence (INSERT STUDY TITLE) is mounting that significant additional climate resiliency is built into smallholder agrocultural systems that combine a number of crops with trees and, if available, livestock. These systems show a greater ability to buffer extreme weather events such as strong rainfall or unusual aridity, and multiply the number of income streams available to the farmer. Such systems are typically very information-rich but require fewer external inputs. Hence, the final policy message is the importance of both boosting research into these systems and of enhancing rural outreach services to relay best practices. None of these global scenario efforts attempt to address distributional issues within countries and the possibility that climate change might affect the vulnerable disproportionately although this is a plausible effect.” Page 26, paragraph 2; “Climate change effects on the vulnerable are significant but are by no means the only threats to sustainable food security. Sustainable development efforts that lead to broad-based economic growth are essential to addressing the needs of vulnerable people and regions. Given the uncertainties in local and regional outcomes of climate change, policies and programs that are based on specific climate scenarios could potentially be counterproductive. Rather, policies and efforts that provide both sustainable economic growth and increase the resiliency of commercial and smallholder farms to a wide range of potential climate change threats are needed. This combination of policy goals has sometimes been referred to as climate-smart agriculture. An added element, discussed in the next chapter, is to develop and disseminate practices that reduce the growth in emissions from agriculture, lowemissions development strategies. Page 27, paragraph 3 and following: - “Autonomous versus planned, and reactive versus anticipatory, adaptation In the poorest populations, much of the necessary adaptation is likely to arise from people’s autonomous effort to ‘make do’. Without the spread of best practice knowledge based on a solid evidence base, such reactive adaptations are likely to be suboptimal. - Adaptation to climate change involves general measures that increase the resilience of the food system (interpreted broadly to mean production, processing, distribution and retail) to any perturbation, as well as specific measures to cope with the particular stresses caused by the changing climate. - Successful adaptation will require new practices and alterations in livelihood strategies. It will also require changes of behaviour by all elements of the private sector, retailers and intermediaries in the food chain, agri-business and the financial sector. It will require action by governments and international organisations, and also by civil society, in particular those concerned with food security, hunger and development. - Successful adaptation will depend to a large degree on steps taken to enable poor smallholder farming families to optimize the production of their land and multiply their sources of income by moving towards mixed agricultural systems of crops, livestock and trees.” Page 28: “3.3 Anticipatory strategies and options for adapting to climate change Because of their poverty, many successful agricultural strategies, such as the regular purchase of fertilizer or the digging of irrigation infrastructure, are not open to smallholder farmers in the LDCs. For such farmers, the best route towards resilience is likely to lie in mixed agricultural systems adapted to local growing conditions. Page 28, “3.3.1 Availability” - Altering agronomic practices (for example reduced tillage to reduce water loss, incorporation of manures and compost, the use of fertilizer trees, windbreaks and distributed shade, and other land use techniques such as tree planting and cover cropping that increase soil organic matter and hence water retention of value both in times of drought and flood). Page 29, first paragraph: “Response to hurricanes and typhoons. In Nicaragua, after the passage of Hurricane Mitch in 1998, a study showed how agroecological practices such as crop rotation, green manure, fertilizer trees, and other natural fertilizers, cover ditches, crop diversification, burning renunciation, etc. preserved an average of 40% more topsoil, had greater moisture retention, and lost 18% less arable land (Holt-Gimenéz cited in de Schutter, 2010) Page 30, paragraph 3 and following: - “More food can be produced on existing farmland using existing knowledge if food producers have access to that knowledge; are provided with the resources to respond to price signals; and if appropriate investments are undertaken in economic and physical infrastructure (market reform and access to markets). Special attention should be paid to encouraging that women are not disadvantaged, both for efficiency and equity reasons - Investment in research is needed into producing crops, trees, animals, and fish with higher yields, higher input efficiencies, and ability to withstand more frequent extreme events. This will require more funding of often neglected subjects such as agronomy and soil science that can improve productivity, resilience and efficiency” Page 32, 3.4.2 third bullet point: “Foster types of agriculture that are more resilient to climate variability through land-use planning and, where feasible, invest in cost-effective civil engineering projects that increase the protection of agricultural lands from extreme events. Ensure infrastructure investment for agriculture and agricultural markets is resilient to climate change.” Page 32, bullet point 6: “Invest in the fundamental and applied research base to improve climate change adaptation (including through animal and plant breeding, agricultural engineering, agronomy, agroforestry and husbandry, soil science, aquiculture, agricultural economics and the relevant social sciences).” Page 33, 3.4.3, NEW bullet point between existing points 2 and 3: “Research is needed to develop mixed cropping systems that may involve any number of different crops, trees for fruit, wood and fooder and fertilizer effects, and livestock and are tailored for different geophysical, social and cultural environments. Page 34, last paragraph: “Successfully adaptation of global agriculture and the food system to expected climate change will require mobilisation of the most effective practices from all modes of agriculture, realising that no signal solution or set of solutions will be appropriate everywhere. Techniques drawn from conventional, agroecological, agroforestry, organic and high-technology food production will all need to be deployed. A pluralistic, evidence-based approach, sensitive to environmental and social context, and to different value systems, is essential. Page 38, paragraph 5: “Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD) strategies needs to take into account two issues. It is estimated that globally, more than 1.6 billion people depend upon the products that forests provide – food, fuel, timber, and fodder - as their main source of livelihood (World Bank, 2008). To meet this huge need without further degrading remaining forest resources, skilful forestry is not likely to be enough. Trees, and the products and services they deliver, must grow on the farm. Second, REDD must account for men and women’s differentiated dependence on forest resources. Women are more dependent than men are on forests and natural resources but at the same time suffer from a lack of secure property rights and from systematic discrimination in access to services. In several regions of the world, women’s roles include conservation and maintenance of forest resources which provides an opportunity through the REDD mechanism to compensate and provide support to their efforts. There may also be employment opportunities for women within the REDD framework (A concern, however, is that women may not be a position to take full advantage of the benefits offered by REDD due to their lower literacy and formal education skills (UNDP 2009). Page 29, NEW penultimate paragraph after “Since demand for livestock products (meat, milk, and eggs) will likely grow, policies and programs that directly or indirectly contribute to reduced emissions of both CH4 and N2O per unit of output are especially important. To meet the currently unsustainable demand for forest products without further degrading remaining forest resources will demand, skilful forestry skilful forestry is not likely to be enough. Trees, and the products and services they deliver, will increasingly need to be grown on agricultural land using cropyield-optimising agoforestry techniques. Page 40, paragraph 3: “To make sure that productivity and resilience enhancing technologies are adopted, extension programs should target those who are making the management decisions, which in many cases are women. This is important for enhancing food security generally but becomes more important in the case of climate change as women’s activities and livelihoods are likely to be disproportionately affected. Small-scale farms account for a large share of global agricultural land use, and rural employment today, and often are operated by women. They are more likely to engage in mixed crop, tree and livestock agriculture, which are likely to be more resilient to climate change. Private sector research is more likely to benefit large-scale farms. Policies and public investments that address the limits facing small-scale farmers, and that ensure women have opportunities for equal access to information and resources will have important productivity, resiliency and povertyreducing benefits for food security generally and for dealing with climate change. The differential effects of climate change on crops will likely alter the optimal design of extension systems. Page 41, paragraph 4: “Successful adaptation of global agriculture and the food system to climate change will require mobilisation of the most effective practices from all modes of agriculture, realising that no single solution or set of solutions will be appropriate everywhere. Techniques drawn from conventional, agro-ecological, agroforestry, organic and hightechnology food production will all need to be evaluated for their location-specific appropriateness. A pluralistic, evidence-based approach, sensitive to environmental and social context, and to different value systems, is essential.” Yours sincerely, Patrick Worms Senior Science Policy Adviser