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Climate change and food systems

Climate change and food systems. Hayes Conference Centre, Derby 1 October 2012. What is the state of food systems in poor countries?. Food systems are unstable, do not provide access and availability to appropriate food necessary for an active and healthy life

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Climate change and food systems

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  1. Climate change and food systems Hayes Conference Centre, Derby 1 October 2012

  2. What is the state of food systems in poor countries? • Food systems are unstable, do not provide access and availability to appropriate food necessary for an active and healthy life • Why? Extreme underinvestment in food production, processing, distribution: Africa net importer • Land tenure insecurity = facilitating land grabs, up to 10% in Ethiopia, Sudan • Land degradation: Soil nutrient depletion, erosion, desertification, deforestation (2/3rds cropland by 2025) • Rain-fed agricultural systems – 60-80% of livelihoods = droughts/floods food losses • Climate change an ADDITIONAL risk

  3. Impacts of GHG warming on weather patterns - IPCC

  4. Impact of these changes on food systems: Africa • Production: 50% decrease in crop yield, by 2080 5%-8% (60-90mh) increase in arid and semi-arid areas, shorter growing season, increased frequency of droughts, floods, cyclones, new animal and plant pests and diseases • Processing/distribution: storage and transport infrastructure regularly destroyed by extreme weather events • Consumption: Reduced intake of non-adapted staples (maize) = substitute with imports, or more locally adapted orphan crops, small livestock

  5. Specific livelihoods groups at risk Between 60% and 80% of all Africans derive most of their livelihoods from small-scale agricultural activity • Small-scale rain-fed crop farmers • Pastoralists: East and Horn of Africa, Sahel • Fishing communities: coastal and inland • Forest dwellers: Central Africa • Urban and rural poorest: Net food consumers: 70% income on food

  6. Example of shifts in Zimbabwe • More heavy rainfall events, tropical cyclones, mid-season dry spells • Semi-arid areas are expanding: less moisture for farming • Ecosystems are shifting: grasslands are turning into savannah/bush: less grazing for livestock • Projected 50% decline in maize yields by 2020

  7. Increased incidence of food crises • Weather and climate change have always impacted on food systems and food security, BUT • In 2000s, weather related disasters average 500/year, compared to 180/year in 1980s (Oxfam) • In Africa, Southern Africa, East/Horn and Sahel food crises almost every 2/3 years since the mid-1990s • Due to underlying vulnerability of food system, BUT increased frequency of droughts means no time to replace lost assets (livestock/income/infrastructure) = chronic hunger and malnutrition

  8. Adapting food systems to climate change Adaptation: Learning to manage new risks, strengthening resilience (bounce back) in the face of change • Disaster Risk Reduction: Community practices and behaviours that are based on participatory vulnerability and capacity assessments, intended to protect food supplies, assets and livelihoods in face of uncertain weather events, local weather information • ASKT: to cope with increasing soil salinity, decreasing moisture, and new pests and diseases, topsoil degradation, reduction in grazelands • Public support: increase support for s-holder food production in public budgets (including donors, international funds), voice and capacity of food producers to engage in markets IN A CLIMATE RESILIENT WAY (infrastructure, subsidies, incentives, extension) • Ecosystem protection: Enhance biodiversity, tree planting, prevent land degradation

  9. False solutions?

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