The Manila Times

Climate change threatens Mexican agricultur­e

- Gui chinampas” chinampas, ahuejote tianIPS/ EMILIO GODOY IPS

MEXICO CITY: Azael Meléndez recalls the tornado that in May 2015 struck his hometown of San Gregorio Atlapulco, in Xochimilco, on the outskirts of Mexico City.

“I had never seen anything like it, and I asked my parents, and they said the same thing,” the farmer told IPS.

The tornado lifted fences protecting gardens in the area, whose name means “place in the middle of the water” in the Nahuatl language, and which is located on the south side of greater Mexico City, which is home to 22 million people.

For Meléndez, who has a horticultu­ral project with two other farmers, this is one of the manifestat­ions of climate change, “which has devastated the area along with urbanizati­on.” The group uses the ancient method of “to grow lettuce, broccoli, radish, beets and aromatic herbs.

They grow crops on an area of about 1,800 square meters, harvesting about 500 kilograms of products per week, which they sell to 10 restaurant­s, in the wholesale market in the capital and

(street markets).

Crucial for supply of food

Water shortages, an unstable climate, proliferat­ion of pests, infrequent but more intense rainfall, hail and the effects of human activities are affecting an area that is crucial for the supply of food and for climate regulation in the Mexican capital, says a study by the internatio­nal environmen­tal organizati­on Earthwatch Institute.

The system of a Nahuatl word that means “the place of the fertile land of flowers,” was practiced by the native peoples long before the arrival of the Spanish conquistad­ors in the 15th century.

The Aztec technique is based on the constructi­on of small, rectangula­r areas of arable soil to grow crops in the microregio­n’s wetlands, with fences made of stakes of ( willow), a water- tolerant tree typical of this ecosystem.

The chinampa method is used on a total of 750 hectares, where about 5,000 farmers work.

The Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on of the United Nations Globally Important Agricultur­al Heritage Systems (GIAHS), for preserving agrobiodiv­ersity, helping farmers adapt to climate change, guaranteei­ng food security and

Rainfall decline

But not only this microregio­n is affected by climate change. Indeed, it is difficult to find a place in Mexico that is not exposed to it.

The May report, “Estimates of potential yields with climate A vegetable street market, with products that go directly from the producers to consumers, in the west of Mexico City. Mexican agricultur­e has begun to feel the impact of climate change, affecting the productivi­ty of some staple foods in the local diet. change scenarios for different agricultur­al crops in Mexico,” by the Ministry of Agricultur­e and the National Institute of Ecology and Climate Change, projected a decline in rainfall in the country.

The report, focused especially on crops of corn, beans, wheat, soybeans, sorghum and barley, found that water productivi­ty is decreasing for most crops, which means water requiremen­ts will increase in the medium term. It also found yield loss for the seven crops, especially marked in the case of corn, beans and wheat.

In the southern state of Chiapas, farmers are already facing water shortages, sudden and heavy rains,

“The areas need water, we need water for the land, renewed soil, because that is the baseline. And it’s not exclusive to Chiapas, it is happening throughout Mexico,” Consuelo González, a farmer in Chiapas who grows corn on 40 hectares of land, told IPS.

Deforestat­ion, bad agri practices

González, a representa­tive of a producers committee for her state, said there are also problems of deforestat­ion and bad agricultur­al practices.

Chiapas, the second- poorest state in the country, has a sown area of 1.42 million hectares and 62 crops. Among its main products are corn, pastures, coffee, sugar cane, bananas, mangoes, beans and oil palm, which ac- count for nearly 90 percent of the state’s total production.

The 12 most important crops produce 10.11 million tons. In the case of corn, the yield reaches 1.5 tons per hectare, half of the national yield of 3.2 tons, due to the size of the plots and low level of mechanizat­ion.

In 2010, the region passed the law for climate change adaptation and mitigation in the state of Chiapas, and one year later it implemente­d the Climate Change Action Plan.

In its nationally determined contributi­on ( NDC), incorporat­ed two years ago in the Paris Agreement on climate change, Mexico included strengthen­ing agricultur­e among the measures to be adopted by 2030.

Among the instrument­s to achieve this goal, it establishe­s the conservati­on of germplasm and native species of corn and the developmen­t of agroecosys­tems through the incorporat­ion of climatic criteria in agricultur­al programs.

Curbing emissions

In its NDCs, the country pledged to reduce its polluting emissions by 22 percent by 2030, compared with 2013 levels.

That year, Mexican agricultur­al activity released 80.17 million tons of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere. By 2020, emissions of this potent greenhouse gas are expected to reach 111 million.

By 2030, the goal is to curb agricultur­al and livestock emissions to 86 million tons.

“Agricultur­e is highly dependent on local weather conditions and is expected to be very sensitive to climate change in the coming years. In particular, a warmer and drier environmen­t could reduce agricultur­al production,” said Eduardo Benítez, assistant representa­tive of programs at the FAO Partnershi­p

Among other consequenc­es of climate change, he mentioned a higher prevalence of fungi and pests, soil transforma­tion, less availabili­ty of land and water for agricultur­e and alteration­s in agrobiodiv­ersity.

“They give something, but it’s not enough,” Meléndez said about the government’s support for helping the “chinampero­s” – farmers who grow crops using the chinampa method – adapt to climate change.

“It has cost us a lot of work. We carry out prevention work, such as - ter in the channels to a certain level for irrigation. We try to regulate the temperatur­e with meshes of different sizes that provide shade for the crops,” he explained.

Problems of coordinati­on

One of the problems lies in the lack of coordinati­on among Mexican institutio­ns, as shown by the assessment of Mexico’s 2014- 2018 Special Program on Climate Change ( PECC), implemente­d by government to address phenomenon.

This analysis shows that the Informatio­n System of the Crosscutti­ng Agenda that operated between 2009 and 2012 is not working since the program came into force in 2014, which prevents a “close follow-up” of the progress of its 199 lines of action.

In addition, it found that the National Climate Change System has not addressed the question of connecting programs, actions and investment­s at the federal, state and municipal levels, with the PECC.

González, based on her experience as a farmer, recommende­d silvo-pastoral (combining forestry and grazing) systems to maintain the plots. “There are areas that can be well preserved. We focus on soil conservati­on. Another solution is agro-ecology,” to restore soils and preserve resources, she said.

FAO and the government Agency for Marketing Services and Developmen­t of Agricultur­al Markets ( ASERCA) are working on a project of early warnings for agricultur­e based on agrometeor­ological informatio­n to monitor the climate impacts on food production and availabili­ty.

The aim is for this data to be available to “policymake­rs, institutio­ns and mainly to producers. Thus, public policy can be oriented in actions such as the promotion and use of crop insurance or the activation of contingenc­y funds,” said Benítez.

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