Независимый Диалог
Местоположение:
Буркина-Фасо, Эфиопия, Гана, Кения, Сьерра-Леоне, Объединенная Республика Танзания
Major focus
By 2050, the world’s population could grow to 9.7 billion, food demand is expected to increase by 50% and global demand for grains such as maize, rice and wheat could increase by 70%. In Africa, food insecurity is one of the major problems and the continent is not on track to eliminate hunger by 2030. On the one hand, the population is growing rapidly and needs an abundant supply of affordable and nutritious food, while on the other, especially small-scale farmers do not have easy access to agricultural inputs and financial resources to raise crop productivity. At the same time, agriculture
... Подробнееis a major contributor to the balance of payments for African economies, and needs to meet domestic demand as well as maintain its place in international trade. African Regions are suffering food insecurity at different extents with Eastern, Middle and Southern Regions suffering the most. One of the main reasons for food insecurity in Africa is related to the huge yield gap of the major food crops that in turn depends on a complex and interdependent variety of factors. How can we meet the food and nutrition demand of a rising population without negative environmental and social consequences? Sustainable Intensification is an approach that uses innovations to increase productivity on existing agricultural land with positive (or at least not detrimental) environmental and social impact. Both words, “Sustainable” and “Intensification,” carry equal weight. The ambition for Sustainable Agricultural Intensification (SAI) can be reflected also in the Sustainable Development Goals. In particular, SDG 15 - Life on Land, which aims to sustainably manage forests, combat desertification, halt and review land degradation and halt biodiversity loss; and SDG2 - Zero Hunger, which seeks to ensure sustainable food production systems and implement resilient agricultural practices that increase productivity and production, help maintain ecosystems, strengthen capacity for adaptation to climate change, extreme weather, drought, flooding and other disasters, progressively improve land and soil quality and maintain genetic diversity. If this ambition is to be realised, the efficiency with which existing resources are used will have to be enhanced to ensure that ecosystems services are maintained. Sustainability also requires ensuring social equity in the productive and environmental benefits from SAI, otherwise the poorer sections of the farming population and women farmers risk being left behind by the promotion of intensification. Despite the promises of SAI practices to ensure food security, a big scientific debate around the effectiveness of Sustainable Intensification strategies developed over the last decade. In particular, a number of NGOs worried about whether it might be used to justify intensification per se and the accelerated adoption of particular forms of high-input or hi-tech agriculture in vulnerable and poor areas at a smallholders scale. Sustainable Intensification can be achieved with a range of approaches at different scales (from plot to landscape). Different domains (productivity, environmental, socio-economic, human, social) can be considered to monitor and assess whether Sustainable Intensification has been achieved or not. Scientific evidences on the role of SAI practices adopted in African countries are still under development and somehow controversial depending on the scale of adoption, the site-specific conditions and the assessment indicators used. It is thus clear that no fixed SAI strategy is possible everywhere and the best trade-offs among different outcomes are to be searched for. The Dialogue discussed with representatives of Research and Academia, Civil Society and Farmers from Europe and Sub-Saharan African Countries, the challenges and the ways in which Sub-Saharan African farming systems can increase production of crops per unit of land, conserve or enhance important ecosystem services, improve resilience to shocks and stresses, while improving livelihoods, equity and social capital to ensure a food security system for all. Скрыть
Направления деятельности: 1, 3, 4
Ключевые слова: Environment and Climate, Governance, Innovation, Policy, Trade-offs, Women & Youth Empowerment