Global Times

EU-funded index to gauge biodiversi­ty in food

New initiative to help produce more climate change-resilient goods

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An EU-funded index measuring biodiversi­ty in food production is expected to be launched next year, giving investors a benchmark for assessing how companies and government­s are making food systems more resilient to climate change.

Investing in food species such as drought-tolerant Ethiopian durum wheat or the frost-resistant Andean grain canahua can make food supply chains more resistant to climate shocks, according to research published on Tuesday by Bioversity Internatio­nal, a global research organizati­on headquarte­red in Rome.

Pre-agricultur­al societies used about 7,000 edible plant species but modern food systems rely on just 30 varieties to feed the world, and the most common crops make up just 2 percent of material stored in gene banks.

Reliance on just a handful of species increases the risk of supply shocks as droughts, rising temperatur­es and unpredicta­ble weather events become more common.

Its new research will form the basis of the European Commission-funded Agrobiodiv­ersity Index, which is expected to be launched in late 2018 and will include concrete criteria for measuring progress toward greater agrobiodiv­ersity.

“The use of biodiversi­ty can be incentiviz­ed by market mechanisms,” said Roberto Ridolfi from the European Commission’s Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t department. “In the future, little by little, it will become good practice in the stock market.”

The mechanism will rank companies based on their efforts to advance biodiversi­ty and can be used by government­s to measure their own agricultur­al initiative­s. Peru, for example, is considerin­g using it to evaluate its agrobiodiv­ersity program.

The study says global food production must become more diverse and include species that are not widely grown at the moment, but could be better equipped to withstand hostile climates and diseases in the future.

“What we see is that a lot of mainstream crops can be quite vulnerable to climate, pests and diseases, in part because many of them come from a narrow genetic base,” said Ann Tutwiler, director general at Bioversity Internatio­nal.

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