ROME, Jan. 17, 2012 - The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and the European Commission announced a new $5.3 million project aimed at helping Malawi, Vietnam and Zambia transition to a "climate-smart" approach to agriculture.

Agriculture and the communities who depend on it for their livelihoods and food security are highly vulnerable to climate change impacts. At the same time the FAO-EU is concerned about agriculture, as a significant producer of greenhouse gases, contributing to global warming.

"Climate-smart agriculture" is an approach that seeks to position the agricultural sector as a solution to these challenges, according to the FAO.

It involves making changes in farming systems that achieve the following goals: improving their contribution to the fight against hunger and poverty; rendering them more resilient to climate change; reducing emissions; and increasing agriculture's potential to capture and sequester atmospheric carbon.

"We need to start putting climate-smart agriculture into practice, working closely with farmers and their communities," said FAO Assistant Director-General for the Economic and Social Development Department, Hafez Ghanem. "But there are no one-size-fits-all solutions — better climate-smart farming practices need to respond to different local conditions, to geography, weather and the natural resource base," he added.

"This project will look closely at three countries and identify challenges and opportunities for climate-smart agriculture and produce strategic plans tailored to each country's own reality," Ghanem said. "While not all solutions identified will be universally applicable, we can learn a lot about how countries could take similar steps and begin shifting to this approach to agriculture."

The EU is providing $3.3 million to support the effort; FAO's contribution is $2 million.

Working closely with agriculture and other ministries in each of the partner countries and collaborating with local and international organizations, the three-year project’s goals include:

         Identify country-specific opportunities for expansion of existing climate-smart practices or implementation of new ones

         Study the constraints that need to be overcome to promote wider adoption of climate-smart agriculture, including investment costs

         Promote integration of national climate change and agricultural strategies to support the implementation of climate-smart agriculture

         Identify innovative mechanisms for linking climate finance with climate-smart agriculture investments

         Build capacity for planning and implementing climate-smart projects capable of attracting international investments

FAO will take the overall lead on the project, working in partnership with national policy and research institutions, as well as global organizations such as the Global Crop Diversity Trust.

By tackling the urgent need to incorporate climate change concerns into agricultural development planning, this new project represents a concrete step forward, said Ghanem. "The problems of climate change are increasingly being felt on the ground, and thus early actions to address the problem are needed, even as international negotiations continue in the search for a global climate agreement," he said.

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