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Regenerative agriculture for low-carbon and resilient coffee farms: A practical guidebook. Version 1.0

Dezembro, 2022
Global

For decades, global coffee consumption has grown, as tastes and offerings for consumers have increased around the world, and global demand for coffee will continue to grow in the years to come. At the same time, climate change presents coffee producers and other supply chain actors with major challenges. Its impacts are already reducing the area that is well suited for growing coffee, and this lends urgency to the adoption of farming strategies than can secure future coffee supplies and the livelihoods of coffee-producing families.

Climate finance strategies to reach the most vulnerable

Dezembro, 2022
Global

Building resilience with climate finance includes ensuring that income and investment opportunities reach vulnerable groups with targeted information, education, and finance. This includes financial literacy training and access to credit in small and affordable increments. Mobile money is one model: in Kenya 194,000 moved out of poverty, the majority female-headed households. Other models for accessible climate finance at the local level include farmers associations, women’s organizations and VSLAs (village savings and loans).

Fish Farming for Resilient Communities – Establishing the Enterprise

Dezembro, 2022
Global

Fish production has remained low in Africa and the Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) region. Efforts have been ramped up to grow the fish industry. Aquaculture production in SSA has increased by an average of 11% annually since 2000. This is twice as fast compared with the rest of the world’s trends. Despite the momentum seen in the last decade and all the financial and technical support, SSA continues to account for less than 1% of global aquaculture production.

How does climate exacerbate root causes of conflict in Guatemala? Climate Security Pathway Analysis

Dezembro, 2022
Guatemala

This factsheet gives answers on how climate exacerbates root causes of conflict in Guatamala, using a pathway analysis. Two main pathways are identified: 1. Livelihood and Food Insecurity: Climate change impacts may exacerbate socioeconomic conditions leading to vulnerability in households dependent on rain-fed subsistence agriculture, and further contribute to food and livelihood insecurity. This, in turn, may spur economic migration towards urban centres inside and outside the country.

Diversification for an inclusive and resilient agri-food system in Kenya

Dezembro, 2022
Kenya

The impacts of climate change in Eastern and Southern Africa (ESA), are already well known to farmers. Climate change affects women more negatively compared to men in five impact areas: (i) agricultural production; (ii) food and nutrition security; (iii) health; (iv) water and energy; (v) climate-related disaster, migration, and conflict. Over 2 million people in Kenya face the threat of food insecurity due to climate change. Maize production is particularly vulnerable to climate change.

Chitetezo Cooperative Federation: Capacity building report January to June 2023

Dezembro, 2022
Global

The objective of this report is to highlight the capacity-building activities conducted by the Community Market for Conservation (COMACO) through the Chitetezo Cooperative Federation (CCF) in collaboration with the International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT). Capacity building activities focused on the following trainings: (i) Crop market workshops with stakeholders; (ii) Cashier or literacy trainings; (iii) chiefdom or cooperative Training on Crop markets; (iv) Field day activities; and (iv) Agroforestry trainings.

Creating an enabling environment and accelerating SDGs through increased public funding of innovative agricultural research and development

Dezembro, 2022
Global

G20 policymakers should strengthen the enabling environment for innovation in agriculture and food systems to unlock public funds to support researchers in developing their innovations. One way to implement this is through increased public funding for innovative agricultural research and development (R&D) efforts such as the Centre of Excellence in Science, Technology, and Innovation (CoE-STI) of the African Union Development Agency – New Partnership for Africa’s Development (AUDA-NEPAD) and CGIAR Accelerate for Impact Platform (A4IP).

Deriving emission factors for mangrove blue carbon ecosystem in Indonesia

Dezembro, 2022
Indonesia

Using ‘higher-tier’ emission factors in National Greenhouse Gas Inventories is essential to improve quality and accuracy when reporting carbon emissions and removals. Here we systematically reviewed 736 data across 249 sites (published 2003–2020) to derive emission factors associated with land-use change in Indonesian mangroves blue carbon ecosystems. Four management regimes—aquaculture, degraded mangrove, regenerated mangrove and undisturbed mangrove—gave mean total ecosystem carbon stocks of 579, 717, 890, and 1061 Mg C ha−1 respectively.

The critical nexus between bioenergy and land use

Dezembro, 2022

A new policy brief from leading experts at the Centre for International Forestry Research-World Agroforestry (CIFOR-ICRAF) and IPB University, as a part of the Center for Global Sustainability’s (CGS) Indonesia Program new guest policy brief series, provides an overview of the crucial interconnection between bioenergy and land use, focusing specifically on the production and employment of biomass for bioenergy and biomaterial. This guest analysis evaluates four case studies to understand sustainable biomass management methodologies.