Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byClyde Stanley Modified over 9 years ago
1
Guide to UNFCCC Negotiations on Agriculture A Toolkit for Communications and Outreach
2
Who Produced the Toolkit? Uniting over 155 organisations from around the world, Farming First is one of the most diverse and active agricultural coalitions in the world. Farming First supporters represent the world’s farmers, scientists and engineers as well as relevant agribusiness associations and civil society organisations. CCAFS brings together the world's best researchers in agricultural science, climate science, environmental and social sciences to identify and address the most important interactions, synergies and trade-offs between climate change and agriculture. The Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation (CTA) is a joint international institution of the African, Caribbean and Pacific (ACP) Group of States and the European Union (EU). Our mission is to advance food and nutritional security, increase prosperity and encourage sound natural resource management in ACP countries.
3
What is the Toolkit? The toolkit provides knowledge and information for understanding the key role agriculture has in the climate change debate. It can be useful at: Negotiations Dialogues Events Networking Conferences
4
Who Can Use this Toolkit? This toolkit can be used by: Negotiators Farmers Scientists Policymakers Agricultural development organisations All advocates for agriculture to be part of UNFCCC process !
5
What Tools Are Available? Key messages An overview of agriculture in the UNFCCC process Frequently Asked Questions Factsheets Websites Infographics Briefs & papers Examples
6
Key Dates Feb 2015: Zero Draft March 2015: Submissions to SBSTA June 2015: SBSTA meetings Dec 2015: COP 21 Includes mentions of both the ‘land sector’ and agriculture: a positive development, negotiators should keep agriculture included Progress made on adaptation but needs to feed into the ADP discussions so that 2020 global framework includes agriculture. Existing solutions can be scaled up. Challenge is not to invent new practices but to share what already works as widely as possible. 2020 agreement should deploy finance, technical inputs and capacity building to support agricultural sector to achieve food security through adaptation and mitigation.
7
Further Key Messages Farmers are experiencing the impacts of climate change NOW and they need action from policy makers, NGOs, politicians and businesses 2020 agreement should acknowledge the importance of agriculture for food security and livelihoods and the role it can play to help meet global adaptation and mitigation goals. 2020 agreement should deploy finance, technical inputs and capacity building to support agricultural sector to achieve food security through adaptation and mitigation. The Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs) by countries represent a key opportunity to bring agriculture into climate change commitments and activities. Agriculture must be included in the INDCs. National policy processes will work best if they combine food security, adaptation and mitigation rather than keeping the three aspects in separate tracks. Financing for both mitigation and adaptation must be part of climate change policies. It is essential that the new Green Climate Fund (GCF) provides stable, long-term support to adaptation and mitigation in agriculture.
8
How to Get Involved Get a deeper knowledge of the process Make a submission to SBSTA Get active on social media Attend relevant events Impress audiences with key facts & figures Bring key data to negotiations Share this toolkit with others
9
Contact Email: info@farmingfirst.org / ccafs@cgiar.orginfo@farmingfirst.org Twitter: @FarmingFirst / @cgiarclimate / @CTAflash YouTube: Farming First / CCAFS / CTA Brussels LinkedIn: Farming First
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.