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Paris Climate Agreement unlocks opportunities for food and farming

After two weeks of negotiations, nearly 200 nations have finally agreed on a global climate change agreement to replace the nearly expired Kyoto Protocol. The Paris Agreement – which aims to limit the increase in global average temperatures to “well below two degrees C” and to pursue efforts to limit it to 1.5 degrees C – will come into force in 2020, and has already been hailed as historic and ambitious by many world leaders.

Though agriculture is not mentioned by name, food security, food production, human rights, gender, ecosystems, and biodiversity are explicit in the Agreement

  • The preamble of the Paris Agreement makes specific reference to “safeguarding food security and ending hunger, and the particular vulnerabilities of food production systems to the adverse impacts of climate change” and also refers to human rights, gender, ecosystems, and biodiversity, all issues that are central to agriculture.
  • Article 2.1 of the Agreement mentions the importance of protecting food production while reducing emissions.

The ambitious 1.5 degrees C target offers some hope for farmers and food security

  • The Paris Agreement aims to limit global temperatures “well below” two degrees C, and pursue a 1.5-degree target. As we’ve previously outlined, the debate between a 1.5 or two degree C target means different future scenarios for agriculture.
  • A 1.5-degree temperature rise would produce fewer climate extremes than a two degree C temperature rise, which is good news for farmers in the tropics, who are on the frontline of heatwaves, droughts, floods, and cyclones.

A 1.5 degree C target demands urgent mitigation in agriculture sector

  • As we’ve noted elsewhere, a 1.5 degree C target will require even more mitigation effort from the agriculture sector than a two-degree target. But even with a two degree C target, by 2050 we will likely run out of viable options for reducing emissions from the industrial, transport and energy sectors.
  • Reducing emissions from agriculture will be imperative as it will be impossible to stay within either a 1.5 or two degree C target if agriculture does not contribute to emissions reductions.
  • The Paris Agreement notes that, on the whole, country commitments to reducing emissions will not limit global temperature rise to two degrees and that “much greater emission reduction efforts will be required”

Countries want to take action on adapting agriculture and reducing emissions from farming – but funds are not yet there

  • Considerable finance is needed for agricultural adaptation and mitigation by Least Developed Countries (LDCs). Our analysis of the INDCs calculates at least USD 5 billion annually.
  • The Paris Agreement commits developed countries to set a new collective financing goal of at least USD 100 billion per year, “taking into account the needs and priorities of developing countries” but does not include binding requirements on financial contributions by individual countries

Issues related to agriculture are being discussed in a slow-moving parallel process under the Subsidiary Body for Scientific and Technological Advice (SBSTA)

Now is the time for countries and observers to prepare their submissions on agriculture to SBSTA for discussion at workshops scheduled for June 2016.

Critical next steps for the global agriculture community

There are some imminent challenges, now that the deal is done. Will countries take action quickly enough to limit global warming below 2-degrees? Will funding will be on hand to support developing countries to implement their plans to combat and adapt to climate change in the agriculture sector? And will there be enough political will to move away from ‘business as usual’?

 

 

  • Paris Climate Agreement unlocks opportunities for food and farming
  • Author/s: Vanessa Meadu, Isabelle Coche, Sonja Vermeulen, and Anette Engelund Friis
  • Publisher: CCAFS