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Dimitra
FAO Initiative on Soaring Food Prices
tc
Get Involved
aud
Biodiversity
FAO Home
About FAO
SPFS
ag
fi
worldfoodsituation
emergencies
Home
What we do
Country information
Appeals and funding
Current focus
Resources
foodclimate
iee-follow-up-committee
WFD2007
KCE

Climate Change Adaptation

Climate change impacts include direct risks such as drought, intense rainfall and heat waves, but can also trigger secondary stresses such as the spread of pests, increased competition for resources, human and species migration and biodiversity losses. Food security may be particularly at risk in arid, semi-arid, and fragile mountain and coastal ecosystems, small islands, developing and least developed countries of the world.

In the context of climate change, adaptation refers to adjustments in human and natural systems to respond to actual or expected climate impacts. Adapting to climate change will depend on adjustments and changes at every level - from community-based to national and international. The range of practices that can be used to adapt to climate change is diverse, and includes changes in behaviour, structural changes, policy based responses, technological responses or managerial responses. 
 
FAO’s climate-related work covers both the short-term fluctuations (climate variability) and the longer-term aspects (climate change).  FAO's role in relation to climate change has gradually advanced from that of advising countries on possible climate change impacts, to an active performance in mobilizing the double role of forestry and agriculture in mitigation and adaptation. Disaster Risk Reduction in the context of current weather extremes emerged as suitable entry point to actively address climate change with farmers and rural communities. 

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