ROME, June 19, 2013 - The 2013
edition of FAO's Statistical Yearbook released today sheds light on agriculture's
contribution to global warming, trends in hunger and malnutrition and the state
of the natural resource base upon which world food production depends.
Greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture
grew 1.6 percent per year during the decade after the year 2000, new
FAO data presented in the yearbook show, with the sector's
total annual output in 2010 reaching 5 billion tons of carbon dioxide
equivalents. This equals 10 percent of all anthropogenic greenhouse gas
emissions.
Among the various agriculture sectors,
livestock activities and the use of synthetic fertilizer are the largest
contributors. This does not include emissions caused by land use change and
wild fires.
Issued annually, FAO's Statistical
Yearbook is a compendium of data on the major trends shaping global
food and agriculture today. For each thematic area, brief analyses of the main
trends are paired with graphical data visualizations as well as tables with key
indicators.
The topics it covers include:
capital and investment; climate change; food availability; food production and
trade; food prices; hunger and malnutrition; the consequences of political instability
and natural- and human-induced disasters on food security; the state of the
agricultural resource base and sustainability and environmental impacts.The new
edition of the Statistical Yearbook was released today during
the regular meeting of FAO's
governing conference (15-22 June).
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