Agriculture and Rural Development Day Logo image
 Agriculture and Rural Development Day Logo text

Partner Blogs

CGIAR
ccafs.cgiar.org/blog >

World Bank
blogs.worldbank.org/climatechange >

Farming First
farmingfirst.org/category/blog >

IFAD
ifad-un.blogspot.com >

Contact

General inquiries
Ratih Septivita
info@agricultureday.org


Media contact

For all media-related inquiries
Nathan Russell  |  Michael Hoevel
media@agricultureday.org

Blog

Climate Smart Agriculture Can be Pretty Smart

December 6, 2011 by Vanessa Meadu

GR-TJ06-09 World BankBy Brent Swallow, University of Alberta. This post is a follow up to his post How smart is climate-smart agriculture?. This post has also been published on the CCAFS blog.

Agriculture and Rural Development Day was a resounding success, with over 500 people participants and an excellent set of plenary presentations, small group “learning events,” and a fun engagement with the South African Minister of Agriculture. For me the highlights were threefold:

  1. A presentation of the summary of the Commission on Sustainable Agriculture and Climate Change by Sir John Beddington. The Commission Report includes summary analysis and a set of clearly articulated and workable recommendations.
  2. Showcasing of many examples of innovative agricultural development initiatives in the learning events
  3. Coalescing of a common approach and simple message about the links between agriculture and climate change that may be simple enough to get the attention of the negotiators.

Innovative agricultural development initiatives included:

  • A startup private seed company in Kenya that can’t meet farmers’ demand for seeds for drought-tolerant varieties;
  • A regional agricultural development approach in Malawi that relies on a large commercial farm that provides training, development, contracts and inputs for local farmer groups;
  • Weather-indexed insurance in West Africa;
  • A carbon farming project in Kenya that is increasing productivity and resilience, while generating carbon credits;
  • A productive safety net project in Ethiopia that reaches over a million farmers;
  • An insurance for work program in Ethiopia, …. to name a few.

The South African Minister of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries, Tina Joemat-Pettersson, has assumed de facto political leadership of the Climate Smart Agriculture initiative. She has done this in a few ways, including convening a meeting of African Ministers of Agriculture, participating very actively in Agriculture and Rural Development Day, and advocating strongly for agriculture in the COP. The goal for this COP: a resolution by the Ad Hoc Working Group on LongTerm Collaborative Action for the establishment of a Work Program on Agriculture under the Subsidiary Body on Scientific and Technical Advice (SBSTA). I certainly hope that Canada supports this.


Brent Swallow is an Environment and Development Economist and Chair of the Department Resource Economics and Environmental Sociology at the University of Alberta, Canada. This story was originally posted on his blog

 

One thought on “Climate Smart Agriculture Can be Pretty Smart

  1. Pingback: How smart is Climate Smart Agriculture? | Agri Climate Culture

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Hosted and sponsored by

 The Rockefeller Foundation logo
 EU logo
 IFAD logo
 World Food Programme logo
 CCAFS logo
 FANRPAN logo
 Durban University of Technology logo
 CTA logo
 Department of Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries logo
 GFAR logo
 World Bank logo

Organised by

 CGIAR logo
 Landbrug & Fødevarer logo
 Farming First logo
 FAO logo
 Donor Platform logo
 Southern African Confederation of Agricultural Unions logo
 World Farmers’ Organisation logo

Media partner

 Reuters AlertNet logo