Country for PR: United Kingdom
Contributor: PR Newswire Europe
Wednesday, November 03 2021 - 06:33
AsiaNet
At COP26, Climate Threats to Smallholder Farmers Drive New Investments in CGIAR Research, Pushing 2021 Pledges Close to $1 Billion
GLASGOW, Scotland, Nov. 3, 2021 /PRNewswire-AsiaNet/ --

-- Adaptation investments urgently needed for agriculture-dependent regions 
like Africa that have done the least to cause the climate crisis but suffer the 
most 


Facing mounting evidence ( 
https://reliefweb.int/report/world/what-can-smallholder-farmers-grow-warmer-world-climate-change-and-future-crop 
) that climate change will fall hardest on agriculture-dependent regions like 
sub-Saharan Africa, a coalition of funders at the United Nations climate summit 
pledged $575 million today to deliver climate-smart solutions to farmers in 
low-income countries via the CGIAR global network of agricultural research 
partnerships. Combined with the $256 million recently pledged at the Global 
Citizen Live event, and other commitments from Sweden and Belgium, CGIAR now 
has secured $863 million this year to confront a host of rapidly intensifying 
climate challenges that could upend the global fight against hunger and 
poverty. 

Photo - https://mma.prnewswire.com/media/1677024/COP26.jpg

There is also the potential for significant additional investments in CGIAR to 
emerge later this week at COP26.

"This critical investment surge is a welcome down-payment for accelerating 
CGIAR's climate adaptation efforts that already are providing millions of 
farmers with innovations like stress-tolerant crop varieties and new strategies 
to restore degraded lands," said Kundhavi Kadiresan, Managing Director, Global 
Engagement and Innovation at CGIAR. "We have a deep understanding of the many 
ways climate change is affecting food production in fast growing regions like 
sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia and a commitment to building resilience 
through integrated, environmentally sustainable solutions that rebalance 
agriculture's relationship with nature."  

CGIAR is the world's largest public sector research partnership serving the 
needs of more than 500 million smallholder farmers who are responsible for 
feeding billions of people in Africa, Asia and Latin America. The effect of 
climate change on crops, fish and livestock is a key factor behind a steady 
rise in hunger that is eroding years of progress. 

The trajectory of the climate threat is particularly daunting in sub-Saharan 
Africa, where most people work in agriculture and impacts on food production 
are a key reason climate change could cost African countries up to 15 percent 
of their GDP ( 
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0305750X1930347X ) by 
2030. There are also fears that absent aggressive efforts to help farmers 
adapt, climate impacts on agriculture in regions already suffering high rates 
of  poverty and malnutrition will make it impossible to achieve the global 
Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) pledging zero hunger and an end to extreme 
poverty ( 
https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/bitstream/handle/10986/34555/Revised-Estimates-of-the-Impact-of-Climate-Change-on-Extreme-Poverty-by-2030.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y 
) by 2030. 

In today's funding announcement, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation pledged 
$315 million over the next three years to support CGIAR's climate-related work. 
Half of the US $315 million investment from the Gates Foundation will support 
climate adaptation initiatives undertaken through the new CGIAR portfolio, 
which is streamlining CGIAR partnerships, knowledge and assets to accelerate 
the pace of innovation flowing to smallholder farmers. 

In addition, the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) 
pledged $215 million over the next five years and Canada $45 million.

They were joined by other funders who also have committed to support CGIAR's 
Research and Innovation strategy for 2022 onwards. Sweden has pledged $18 
million and Belgium, noting that it wants to continue its strong partnership 
with CGIAR, put forth plans to release an additional $14 million pending 
approval of the 2022 budget by its federal parliament.  

The investments announced today are on top of $256 million pledged to CGIAR by 
the European Commission, the Netherlands and Belgium at the September Global 
Citizen Live event. That pledge included $162.4 million from European 
Commission; $87 million from the Netherlands; and $7 million from Belgium.

"Climate impacts on food production are an existential threat for several 
hundred million people who depend on agriculture to support their families," 
said Bill Gates, co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. "CGIAR has 
been delivering high-impact solutions to smallholder farmers for half a century 
(https://www.cgiar.org/cgiar-at-50/ )  and I'm confident they can lead a global 
effort to develop the innovations needed to adapt to a changing climate."

"As one of CGIAR's founding donors, USAID is proud to continue our longstanding 
partnership by committing at least $215 million over five years to CGIAR's 
critical agriculture research and innovation," said Dr. Jim Barnhart, Assistant 
to the Administrator at USAID's Bureau for Resilience and Food Security. 
"Climate change is threatening the lives and livelihoods of families and 
communities, particularly in the least developed countries. This funding will 
contribute to raising agricultural productivity for 200 million people in South 
Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa by 25 percent by 2030. CGIAR is an important 
partner in our work to build a food secure, climate-resilient future." 

"For 50 years, CGIAR has delivered critical research and innovation to address 
hunger," said Honourable Harjit S. Sajjan, Minister of International 
Development and Minister responsible for the Pacific Economic Development 
Agency of Canada. "Canada has been a partner since the very beginning because 
we believe scientific research and innovation is necessary in making food, land 
and water systems more sustainable, equitable and efficient. Today, we are 
pleased to further support the work of CGIAR by contributing CAD $55 million 
over three years to help end hunger and build climate smart and sustainable 
food systems, and put gender equality at the forefront of global agricultural 
research for development."

The new investments are building on an already strong foundation of 
CGIAR-supported climate work. For example, in recent years, CGIAR partnerships 
have provided about eight million farming households with 200 varieties of 
climate-smart maize (https://www.cgiar.org/innovations/climate-smart-maize/ ) 
and some 18 million farmers with new varieties of flood and salt-tolerant rice 
(https://www.cgiar.org/innovations/climate-smart-rice/ ). CGIAR is also leading 
efforts to integrate a host of climate-smart food production practices across a 
network of climate-smart villages and valleys 
(https://www.cgiar.org/innovations/climate-smart-villages-and-valleys/ ) in 
Africa, Asia and Latin America that are home to millions of farming families. 
In addition, CGIAR's pioneering work on low-emission, high-nutrition 
(https://www.cgiar.org/news-events/news/diversifying-aquaculture-systems-to-nour
ish-nations/ ) food production like aquaculture is opening up new sustainable 
pathways for improving diets and incomes in rural communities.    

The quest at COP26 to secure more support for smallholder farmers is getting a 
significant lift from the launch of the new Agriculture Innovation Mission for 
Climate or AIM4C (https://aimforclimate.org/ ). The coalition, which now 
includes more than 30 countries, was formed by the United States and the United 
Arab Emirates to generate new funding for basic breakthrough agriculture 
research, international partnerships and national agricultural research systems 
in low-income countries. A key focus of AIM4C is to significantly increase 
investments in "innovation sprints" – projects primed to translate new 
investments into immediate impact for smallholder farmers.  

A $40 million innovation sprint led by CGIAR, in partnership with the 
Foundation for Food & Agriculture Research (FFAR) and the Gates Foundation, 
will unlock key climate-resilient traits from CGIAR's vast global collections 
of crop diversity. This sprint will supply crop breeders with the raw materials 
they need to provide farmers with a wide array of climate-smart crop varieties.

"The urgency is clear: if the global community is truly committed to ending 
hunger and poverty, then it must act now to support smallholder farming 
communities that are already being hit hard by climate change," said Claudia 
Sadoff, Executive Management Team Convener, and Managing Director, Research 
Delivery and Impact at CGIAR. "There are many exciting innovations available.  
But even with today's announcements there is still a large gap between the 
magnitude of the climate threat to smallholder farmers and investments required 
to help them adapt."   

Sadoff noted that investing in adaptation is also a "historic opportunity to 
implement nature-positive approaches to food production across some of the 
world's most valuable and vulnerable ecosystems." 

"Adaptation in agriculture is about pursuing a greener pathway," she said. 
"That includes providing technologies that help farmers grow more food with 
less water and revitalizing degraded landscapes through holistic strategies 
that support both food production and ecosystem services."

Notes to editor:

About CGIAR

CGIAR is a global research partnership for a food-secure future. CGIAR science 
is dedicated to transforming food, land and water systems in a climate crisis. 
Its research is carried out by 13 CGIAR Centers/Alliances in close 
collaboration with hundreds of partners, including national and regional 
research institutes, civil society organizations, academia, development 
organizations and the private sector. www.cgiar.org 

SOURCE  CGIAR


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