Climate Change News

FAO news on climate change

Promoting climate-smart agriculture 5 November 2009 The twin battles to improve food security for a growing world population and contain climate change can be fought on the same front—the world's farmland, FAO said in a new report released today. Agriculture not only suffers the impacts of climate change, it is also responsible for 14 percent of global greenhouse gas emissions. But agriculture has the potential to be an important part of the solution, through mitigation—reducing and/or removing—a significant amount of global emissions, FAO says. Some 70 percent of this mitigation potential could be realized in developing countries. [more...]
The UN-REDD Programme welcomes five new countries 3 November 2009 The UN-REDD Programme’s third Policy Board welcomed five new countries. Argentina, Cambodia, Ecuador, Nepal and Sri Lanka are the first to officially request to participate in the UN-REDD Programme, in addition to the initial nine member countries. Nearly 20 countries have expressed interest and more are expected to join. [more...]
FAO targets land tenure 27 October 2009 Land ownership laws a key instrument in fighting hunger -- FAO has begun widespread consultations over the first ever international guidelines on governance of tenure to land and other natural resources such as water supplies, fisheries and forests. [more...]
Global forest monitoring to help mitigate climate change 20 October 2009 For the first time worldwide, free and ready-to-use high-resolution satellite data is now available to monitor forests and help reduce emissions from deforestation and forest degradation. The monitoring system has been launched by FAO and other partners as part of the Global Forest Resources Assessment. [more...]
Healthy oceans new key to combating climate change 14 October 2009 A 'Blue Carbon' fund able to invest in the maintenance and rehabilitation of key marine ecosystems should be considered by governments keen to combat climate change. A new Rapid Response Report released today estimates that carbon emissions--equal to half the annual emissions of the global transport sector--are being captured and stored by marine ecosystems such as mangroves, salt marshes and seagrasses. [more...]
Linking saving forests to climate change mitigation and sustainable livelihoods 12 October 2009 World Forestry Congress to meet in Buenos Aires – As climate change negotiations enter their final stretch towards the December conference in Copenhagen, Denmark, the World Forestry Congress will be held in Buenos Aires, Argentina, 18-23 October 2009.The most important meeting on the global calendar with regard to the forestry sector, the World Forestry Congress has been held every six years since 1926, organized by the government of the host country under the auspices of FAO. [more...]
2050: Climate change will worsen the plight of the poor 7 October 2009 Future of agriculture and food security closely linked to climate change -- Poorest regions with the highest levels of chronic hunger are likely to be among the worst affected by climate change, according to an FAO discussion paper published today. Many developing countries, particularly in Africa, could become increasingly dependent on food imports. [more...]
2050: Increased investment in agricultural research essential 26 September 2009 Producing more food will largely depend on increasing crop yields, not farming more land -- Boosting agricultural production to the levels needed to feed an expanded world population will require sharply increased public investment in research and development and widespread adoption of new technologies, farming techniques and crop varieties, according to a new FAO discussion paper published today. [more...]
Wood energy consumption increase is here to stay 25 September 2009 Geneva, 25 September 2009 -- Wood energy consumption has increased by 3.5% annually between 2005 and 2007 in UNECE’s 56 Member States, concluded a UNECE/FAO workshop on “Current and future woody biomass for energy – Monitoring use and understanding technology” held on 15-16 September 2009 in Riga. [more...]
25 September 2009 "We should act now to curb climate change. We can do it if science, governments, businesses and communities come together and address this pressing issue."Read the full interview with Balgis Osman-Elasha, Nobel Peace Prize laureate together with theIntergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) who will be a keynote speaker on “Producing for development” at the XIII World Forestry Congress in Argentina. [more...]
High level event on forests and climate change supports emissions reduction mechanism 24 September 2009 In an unprecedented display of cooperation between developed and developing countries on climate change, eighteen Heads of State gathered at UN headquarters in New York on 23 September to publicly express their commitment and support for REDD—Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation in developing counties. [more...]
REDD on the agenda at UN Summit on Climate Change 22 September 2009 United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon convened on 22 September a Summit on Climate Change to mobilize the political will and vision needed to reach an ambitious agreed outcome based on science at the UN climate talks in Copenhagen in December 2009. It will include a specific high-level session on reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation (REDD) on 23 September. [more...]
First shoots of Haiti’s agricultural renaissance 10 September 2009 $10.2 million FAO/IFAD seed scheme yields results --- A $10.2 million scheme to distribute and multiply quality seeds in Haiti has significantly increased food production in the Caribbean nation providing cheaper food for the population and boosting farmers' incomes. Requested by the Haitian government, financed by a loan from the International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) and implemented by FAO, the programme was introduced to combat high international food prices. [more...]
Third World Climate Conference 4 September 2009 Geneva meeting to examine vital role of climate information and prediction --- With climate change increasing the incidence and severity of weather events, agriculture, one of the most climate dependent of all human activities, depends heavily on effective meteorological services which are vital to climate change mitigation and adaptation, said an FAO expert today. “The economic costs associated with natural disasters, including extreme weather events, have increased 14-fold in agriculture since the 1950s,” said Alexander Mueller, FAO Assistant Director-General for Natural Resources, speaking at this week’s third World Climate Conference (WCC-3) being held in Geneva. [more...]
The lurking menace of weeds 3 September 2009 Farmers' enemy No. 1 --- Today more than a billion people in the world are hungry, the result of flawed policies mainly, but also of wars and revolutions and of natural hazards like floods, droughts, pests and diseases compounded, nowadays, by climate change. But one huge hunger-maker lurks largely unnoticed ... [more...]
FAO initiates debate on declaration for World Summit on Food Security 1 September 2009 Calls for eradication of hunger by 2025 and for more investment in agriculture --- FAO Director-General Jacques Diouf has invited governments around the world to participate in negotiations to agree on a declaration for adoption by the World Summit of Heads of State and Government on Food Security, to take place from 16 to 18 November 2009 in Rome. The decision to convene the summit was taken by the FAO Council in June 2009. To initiate the negotiation process, Dr Diouf has sent a document to Ministers for Foreign Affairs, Development Cooperation and Agriculture of members of FAO and the United Nations. [more...]
Youth Gathering on Climate Change to Call for Real Action in Copenhagen 14 August 2009 Emerging leaders representing three billion people - the children and youth of the planet - will converge on the Republic of Korea to voice their demands for action on climate change at the Copenhagen meeting.FAO with other partners is supporting UNEP’s Tunza International Children and Youth Conference, in Daejeon (Republic of Korea) on 17-23 August, the biggest youth gathering on climate change before the UN climate conference in December. [more...]
FAO and YUNGA mobilizing youth for Copenhagen Seal the Deal Petition 7 August 2009 Reaching a deal by the time the meeting ends on December 18 will depend not only on political negotiations but also on public pressure. To do this, the United Nations has launched “Seal the Deal”, a campaign that encourages users to sign an online, a global petition which will be presented to world leaders. FAO and YUNGA are supporting UNEP in mobilizing one million young people to march across one hundred capitals to deliver to global leaders the Seal the Deal Petition on behalf of the world’s three billion young people. [more...]
The wildland fire problem 27 July 2009 Every year fires affect an estimated 350 million hectares of land, with damage to property, livelihoods and frequently loss of life. Uncontrolled vegetation fires also contribute to global warming, air pollution, desertification and loss of biodiversity. Fire prevention is one of the most effective counter measures. [more...]
World leaders in L’aquila, Italy reaffirm the importance of forests in fighting climate change 10 July 2009 Group of Eight leaders meeting in L'Aquila, Italy, this week reaffirmed the need to protect the world’s forests in addressing climate change and pledged to cooperate around innovative initiatives like the UN Collaborative Programme on Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and forest Degradation (UN-REDD Programme). At the conclusion of the first day of the Summit, the G8 leaders released a declaration saying: “We remain engaged in seeking the reduction of emissions from deforestation and forest degradation and in further promoting sustainable forest management globally..." [more...]
last updated: Monday, January 19, 2009