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How to create resilient agriculture
Food security is critical to the mission of Rio+20, writes Gordon Conway, Imperial College London. The threats are numerous: repeated food price spikes; shortages of good-quality land and water; rising energy energy and fertiliser prices; and the consequences of climate change… More |
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Water wars on the driest continent on Earth
Australia, the driest continent on earth, has but one major river system, writes Lolo Houbein. The Murray-Darling feeds four states before reaching the Great Southern Ocean. Most agriculture takes place in its basin. Frequent droughts and irrigation over-use almost killed the Murray River when it no longer reached the ocean and the Lower Lakes dried up, ruining agriculture and killing thousands of animals and some people… More
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Food security: The food system concept
Food security occurs when “all people, at all times, have physical and economic access to sufficient, safe, and nutritious food to meet their dietary needs and food preferences for an active and healthy life” (FAO World Food Summit, 1996). Globally, food production has kept ahead of demand for many years, yet about one billion people currently do not have access to sufficient calories; a further billion do not have access to adequate nutrition, write Dr. John Ingram, University of Oxford and Professor Tim Benton, University of Leeds This is due to a combination of biophysical, socioeconomic and political factors… More |
Vue de terrain
Mère et productrice, la femme rurale est la clé de l’entretien de la famille, de la sécurité alimentaire ainsi qu’au développement durable, écrit Kantarama Césaire, Femme rurale veuve et agriculture du RWANDA Elle joue un rôle sur toute la chaine de production agricole… More |
Views from the Field
Césarie Kantarama – Ms Kantarama is a widowed woman and a smallholder farmer from Rwanda where she raises eight children, including 3 adopted. Her thoughts are translated below from French. Both as mother and producer, a rural woman is the key for a good family life, food security and sustainable development. She is active at all different stages in the agricultural value/production chain… More |
Hope in new scientific insights to avoid global agricultural tragedy
Approximately 18% of the world’s land is used for agriculture, however 80% of this figure is accounted for by non-cropland agriculture, writes Allan Savory In many of Earth’s most troubled regions, countries typically have only 1% to 5% cropland, with the rest being home to once thriving pastoral people… More |
The Female Face of Farming
As the Rio+20 negotiations progress, the contributions and challenges faced by one half of the world’s population remain largely ignored and underrepresented, writes Robynne Anderson, World Farmers Organisation. Most of the world’s poor live in rural areas and are particularly vulnerable to food insecurity. Half of that population – women – faces additional vulnerabilities and constraints, but also constitutes the backbone of communities’ livelihoods, well-being and food security… More |
Disappearing bees, bumblebees and biodiversity: A Precautionary Tale
Although the number of cultivated honeybees is growing worldwide, there has been an alarming decline in North America and Europe, labelled as Colony Collapse Disorder (CCD), prompting much publicity and research, writes Sharafin Gardiner. In the USA alone, bumblebee numbers have declined by 96% and their range has shunk by up to 87%… More |
Cities and Regions together towards Rio+20
On 23rd April, a High-level Local and Regional Authorities’ delegation presented eight recommendations to the United Nations Secretary General, Ban Ki-moon, to achieve sustainable cities and regions, writes Natalène Poisson, UCLG. United Cities and Local Governments (UCLG) and UN-Habitat, with the support of Cities Alliance, gathered local and subnational government leaders, and their main worldwide networks, together at a meeting in New York, where they presented their key messages towards Rio+20 to United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, United Nations officials and representatives of national delegations… More |
Reflections on the negotiations – Tuesday, 24th April
Tuesday morning’s plenary on sections III and V focused on food security, writes Emma Puka-Beals, Mount Holyoke College. The G77+China moved to retain some of its previously proposed text, but in a change from Monday’s plenary, negotiated primarily on the basis of Co-Chairs’ Streamlined Text paragraphs. Delegates disagreed on whether food security should be articulated as a right or a goal… More |
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Quote of the day
The path that values ecosystem function as the basis of life and wealth is the one that leads to sustainability, less conflict, and ultimately, survival for the human race.
John D. Liu
Outreach is a multi-stakeholder magazine which is published daily at Rio+20 Intersessional and Preparatory Meetings. The articles written are intended to reflect those of the authors alone or where indicated a coalition’s opinion. An individual’s article is the opinion of that author alone, and does not reflect the opinions of all stakeholders.
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