Africa
is the continent to watch out for when the climate talks peak in Paris later
this year.
The 21st
Conference of Parties (COP21) of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate
Change (UNFCCC) will fashion out an agreement to drastically reduce carbon emissions
in the atmosphere.
There has
been a remarkable improvement in Africa’s participation in the international
climate negotiations, says George Wamukoya, a member of the African Group of Negotiators
(AGN).
Since
2008, the continent has fostered a strong common position which has been articulated
and updated at every UNFCCC COP.
INDCs from Africa
According
to Mr. Wamukoya, the Intended Nationally Determined Contributions (INDCs) is
going to be a game changer in informing negotiations for the December 2015
agreement.
“If you
look at the origins of INDCs, it was for mitigation purposes and Africa
contributes less than 4% of the global emissions so obviously we are not
supposed to be focusing on mitigation; our focus is in adaptation and therefore
since that is an instrument that is going to be used for countries to
demonstrate what they are going to do in order to address climate change,
African countries are forced to do that,” he observed.
Gabon is
the first country to submit its INDC whilst other African countries are in the
process of preparing their INDCs, which they are expected to deliver by the end
of September.
The INDCs
will form the foundation for climate action post-2020 when the new agreement to
be set in Paris is set to come into effect.
Africa
is among the most vulnerable when it comes to the impacts of climate change.
The fifth assessment report of Intergovernmental Panel
on Climate Change (IPCC) projects that rising temperatures in many areas in
Africa have ramifications for agriculture and farmer livelihoods.
Agriculture
and land use are therefore of paramount interest in the negotiations to ensure
food security and economic growth of the continent.
Climate-smart agriculture has been
identified as offering triple wins for food security, adaptation and mitigation
in Africa.
While
the UNFCCC can establish the international policy framework on how agriculture
is incorporated into future climate agreements, much policy development has to
occur in national, regional and continental policy arenas.
Mr. Wamukoya
says the INDCs should serve as the platform through which Africa position
itself in advancing agriculture and therefore making a statement to the world
that agriculture should be included in the 2015 agreement.
“If
Africa is serious about agriculture being a priority, then they must demonstrate
that by having one of their priority INDCs being agriculture and trying to
identify issues that they can do as Africa or as countries and those that
require the support from other partners because they are supposed to support
our adaptation,” he stated.
Alliance for Climate-Smart
Agriculture
Africa is
looking at climate adaptation and mitigation as well as means of implementation
– technology, capacity building and finance – in seeking climate justice.
The Comprehensive
Africa Agriculture Development Programme(CAADP), spearheaded by the African
Union’s NEPAD Agency, is the key arena for ensuring that climate change is mainstreamed
into agricultural development at the national level adaptation plans and
mitigation strategies.
The NEPAD
has convened the Africa Climate-Smart Agriculture Alliance (ACSAA) with a goal
of reaching 25million farm households by 2025.
“If we
fail in agriculture, we have failed in all other sectors because Africa is
agriculture,” said a participant at the 1st ACSAA Forum in Addis
Ababa, Ethiopia.
Climate justice
advocate, Robert Chimambo of the Pan-African Climate Justice Alliance (PACJA)
says access to renewable energy would be critical to enable smallholder farmers
add value at the farm-level for higher income earnings.
He says each
country would need to find out the cost-effective ways of delivering energy to
smallholder farmers.
“What we
need in the context of climate change is resources to roll out small
hydropower, solar and other renewable energy to reach the lowest of our farmers
and our communities,” he noted.
The CSA Alliance
will serve as Africa’s leading platform to catalyze result-oriented and
on-the-ground implementation support in response to both
the challenges and opportunities that climate change brings.
NEPAD
Programmes Director, Estherine
Fotabong, has noted that the agriculture-climate change nexus is an economic
and development issue.
The AU-NEPAD
is working closely with the group of negotiators through the African
Ministerial Conference on the Environment (AMCEN) process, she said.
There are
also collaborations with the regional economic blocs, including ECOWAS and
COMESA, to prioritize agriculture in the negotiations.
Mrs.
Fatobong has acknowledged “the negotiators come from the Environment
Ministries; they are not necessarily agricultural experts and so their
appreciation of the details of agricultural issues might not be at its best”.
Placing Agriculture at Centre of
Negotiations
The NEPAD
wants to involve agricultural experts to enrich the deliberations at the 42nd
Session of the Subsidiary Body for Scientific and
Technological Advice (SBSTA) in
Bonn, where the group of negotiators will be meeting in June.
Africa has
already made a submission on climate impacts on agriculture, emphasizing the
importance of agriculture to its economy and calls on partners to include it in
the agreement.
Climate-smart
agriculture, Mrs. Fotabong says, should also involve policies that are “gender
appropriate because women are the majority of African smallholder farmers”.
She hopes
the ACSAA will serve the purpose of advocating for attention to the
agricultural sector.
“Having
an Alliance means you have the critical mass that can talk about the issue; that
can communicate the importance of ensuring that agriculture is given the kind
of prominence that we hope to see under the UNFCCC process happens,” she said.
The CSA
Alliance will need to increase the voice of Africa on the fight for
recognition, play advisory role to the negotiation team, lobby and advocate on
Africa’s position on agriculture, gender and climate change.
Mr. Wamukoya
has welcomed the Alliance as a platform to share information and experiences with
the AGN to inform the negotiations.
It is
expected that COP 21 Paris will mark a milestone for vulnerable African
smallholder farmers to access the needed support to mitigate and adapt to the
changing climate.
Audio report...
https://soundcloud.com/kofi-adu-domfeh-1/african-farmers-at-centre-of-climate-negotiations
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