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Knowledge on Climate Smart Agriculture
Ngày đăng: 09/03/2017Lượt xem: 1373FAO estimates that feeding the world population will require a 60 percent increase in total agricultural production.
With many of the resources needed for sustainable food security already stretched, the food security challenges are
huge.Why do we need climate - smart agriculture?FAO estimates that feeding the world population will require a 60 percent increase in total agricultural production. With many of the resources needed for sustainable food security already stretched, the food security challenges are huge. At the same time climate change is already negatively impacting agricultural production globally and locally. Climate risks to cropping, livestock and sheries are expected to increase in coming decades, particularly in low-income countries where adaptive capacity is weaker. Impacts on agriculture threaten both food security and agriculture’s pivotal role in rural livelihoods and broad-based development. Also the agricultural sector, if emissions from land use change are also included, generates about one-quarter of global greenhouse gas emissions.What defines climate - smart agriculture?Climate-smart agriculture (CSA) is an integrative approach to address these interlinked challenges of food security and climate change, that explicitly aims for three objectives: (1) sustainably increasing agricultural productivity, to support equitable increases in farm incomes, food security and development; (2) adapting and building resilience of agricultural and food security systems to climate change at multiple levels; and (3) reducing greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture (including crops, livestock and sheries).
CSA invites to consider these three objectives together at dierent scales - from farm to landscape – at dierent levels - from local to global - and over short and long time horizons, taking into account national and local specicities and priorities.What is different about climate - smart agriculture?
What is new about CSA is an explicit consideration of climatic risks that are happening more rapidly and with greater intensity than in the past. New climate risks, require changes in agricultural technologies and approaches to improve the lives of those still locked in food insecurity and poverty and to prevent the loss of gains already achieved. CSA approaches entail greater investment in
1. Managing climate risks,
2. Understanding and planning for adaptive transitions that may be needed, for example into new farming
systems or livelihoods, and
3. Exploiting opportunities for reducing or removing greenhouse gas emissions where feasible.
What is the history of climate - smart agriculture?
FAO coined the term CSA in the background document prepared for the 2010 Hague Conference on Food Security, Agriculture and Climate Change. The CSA concept was developed with a strong focus on food security, for now and the future, including adaptation to climate change. The CSA concept now has wide ownership among, governments, regional and international agencies, civil society and private sector. Emerging global and regional (Africa) Alliances on Climate-Smart Agriculture (ACSA) provide a platform for shared learning and collaboration among all interested parties.What actions are needed to implement climate - smart agriculture?
Governments and partners seeking to facilitate the implementation of CSA can undertake a range of actions to provide the foundation for eective CSA across agricultural systems, landscapes and food systems. CSA approaches include four major types of actions:
1. Expanding the evidence base and assessment tools to identify agricultural growth strategies for food security that
integrate necessary adaptation and potential mitigation
2. Building policy frameworks and consensus to support implementation at scale
3. Strengthening national and local institutions to enable farmer management of climate risks and adoption of
context-suitable agricultural practices, technologies and systems
4. Enhancing nancing options to support implementation, linking climate and agricultural nance
Tệp đính kèm:
Brief knowledge on CSA 2014.pdfCây dữ liệu:Dữ liệu liên quan:- Strengthening Institutional Capacity For Disaster Risk Management In Viet Nam Including Climate Change Related Risks (SCDM Phase II)
- CLIMATE-SMART AGRICULTURE Sourcebook
- ASEAN Regional Guidelines for Promoting Climate Smart Agriculture (CSA) Practices
- Fao success Stories on Climate-Smart Agriculture
- The future of food and agriculture: Trends and challenges
- Evidence and Knowledge Gaps on Climate-Smart Agriculture in Vietnam
- Economics and Policy Innovations for Climate-Smart Agriculture
- Women farmers and resilience in the face of climate change
- FAO Success Stories on Climate-Smart Agriculture
- FAO Strategy on Climate Change
- Climate change and environment
- Climate change and polar region
- What Is Climate Change?
- Climate change affects everyone
- What is climate-smart agriculture?
- Liên kết website
- Thăm dò ý kiến
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Bạn thấy nội dung trên chuyên trang CSA như thế nào?Phong phú, đa dạngTạm đượcCần bổ sung thêmBình chọnKết quả
Bạn thấy nội dung trên chuyên trang CSA như thế nào?
Tổng số:209 phiếu
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Phong phú, đa dạng | 60,3 60,3% |
126 phiếu | |
Tạm được | 3,3 3,3% |
7 phiếu | |
Cần bổ sung thêm | 36,4 36,4% |
76 phiếu |
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