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Climate Change Campaign | |||||||
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Live from Cancun - a dialogue session with IAASTD Co-Chair Hans Herren and the IFOAM delegation IFOAM & IATP Official Side Event at CoP16 in Cancun IFOAM CoP 16 Background Briefing Paper UN Right to Food urges urgent shift to ecological based farming to tackle climate change & hunger IFOAM Paper: The Potential Impact of a Climate Agreement on Food Security, Right to Food & Climate Change Cancun Climate Talks Overview by IATP NEW! Review of key elements of negotiations by TWN Go to Cancun page for summit updates Organic Agriculture has a significant role to play in addressing two of the world’s biggest and most urgent issues: climate change and food security. Climate change mitigation and adaptation and food security are inseparable and inherent beneficial characteristics of Organic Agriculture. Organic Agriculture has well established practices that simultaneously mitigate climate change, build resilient farming systems, reduce poverty and improve food security. Organic Agriculture emits much lower levels of greenhouse gases (GHG), and quickly, affordably and effectively sequesters carbon in the soil. In addition, Organic Agriculture makes farms and people more resilient to climate change, mainly due to its water efficiency, resilience to extreme weather events and lower risk of complete crop failure. IFOAM at the UNFCCC- Bonn meetings, August: click here for information. In time for the Copenhagen Climate Change Conference, IFOAM and IFOAM EU Group have published three new publications to raise awareness of the important role of organic agriculture in mitigating and adapting to climate change and securing food supply:
Organic Agriculture mitigates climate change: It reduces greenhouse gases, especially nitrous oxide, as no chemical nitrogen fertilizers are used and nutrient losses are minimized. It stores carbon in soil and plant biomass by building organic matter, encouraging agro-forestry and forbidding the clearance of primary ecosystems. It minimizes energy consumption by 30-70% per unit of land by eliminating the energy required to manufacture synthetic fertilizers, and by using internal farm inputs, thus reducing fuel used for transportation. Organic Agriculture helps farmers adapt to climate change: It prevents nutrient and water loss through high organic matter content and soil covers, thus making soils more resilient to floods, droughts and land degradation processes. It preserves seed and crop diversity which increases crop resistance to pests and disease. Maintenance of diversity also helps farmers evolve new cropping systems to adapt to climatic changes. It minimizes risk as a result of stable agro-ecosystems and yields, and lower production costs. Conventional agriculture contributes to climate change: It uses synthetic fertilizers and
pesticides that require significant amounts of energy to manufacture |
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IFOAM - International Federation of Organic Agriculture | info@ifoam.org |
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