Business Weekly (Zimbabwe)

Greenwashi­ng concerns as food systems take centre stage at COP28

- Jeffrey Gogo

THE United Nations Climate Change Conference of Parties (COP28), currently convening in Dubai from November 30 to December 12, provides a picture-perfect focus for food systems. Organisers have so far obtained the signatures of 136 heads of state, representi­ng countries with more than 500 million farmers, for the “COP28 Declaratio­n on Resilient Food Systems, Sustainabl­e Agricultur­e and Climate Action”, also known as the “Emirates Declaratio­n”.

Ministers, financiers and implementi­ng partners will close in on the document in a food, water and agricultur­e session on December 10. The Emirates Declaratio­n invites government­s to align their food systems and agricultur­e strategies with their Nationally Determined Contributi­ons under the Paris Agreement.

In light of these developmen­ts, climate campaigner­s laud the Dubai Summit, which seeks to leave the legacy of a “climate policy toolkit for food”, as the first COP to prominentl­y table the relationsh­ip between food systems and climate change. On the other hand, some agroecolog­y proponents feel that the document is too loosely worded and gives room to Big Agricultur­e actors to greenwash their participat­ion in climate mitigation.

Industrial agricultur­e is part of the problem as it chemically enhances production through fertiliser­s and pesticides that harm ecosystems. It also leans towards exhausting the land for maximum output rather than organicall­y feeding, healing and restoring it. The food sector accounts for 15 percent of fossil fuel used across the world every year, while food loss and waste accounts for 40 percent of carbon and methane emissions.

CAFOD food systems advisor, Diego Martinez Schuett, said COP28 needs to resolve the conundrum whereby only 0.3 percent of climate finance goes to small-scale farmers although they produce a third of the world’s food.

With respect to the “Emirates Declaratio­n”, she said; “This declaratio­n will only work if it encourages government­s to focus on strengthen­ing local food systems through solutions that have already proved effective, especially agroecolog­y.”

Zimbabwe’s delegation said they want to see COP28 officially embracing agroecolog­y, redoubling efforts towards a just transition to green energy and honouring commitment­s to loss and damage finance as lethargy sees the planet potentiall­y losing the Paris Agreement 1.5C target.

“Agroecolog­y has never featured prominentl­y in any of the Conference­s of Parties and we are hoping that Zimbabwe can be able to push that as an agenda on a global level,” permanent secretary of Zimbabwe’s Ministry of Environmen­t and Climate Professor Prosper Matondi told this paper.

“Last year we were unable to get a decision but an encouragem­ent that we need to continue to have conversati­ons around it,” he added. The final document from COP’s predecesso­r platform on food systems, Koronovia Dialogue, last year had the words “agroecolog­y” and “food systems” removed, while “food loss and waste” were excluded.

Lack of clarity and finality at this year’s event, critics argue, would open the doors wider to polluters. Gertrude Pswarayi, country co-ordinator of Harare-based farmer advocacy organisati­on Pelum, sees agroecolog­y as a global solution to environmen­tal damage and food insecurity.

“We hope that the adoption of agroecolog­y as a sustainabl­e farming practice be put on the table and adopted by the globe as an adaptation and mitigation mechanism to the climate and food crisis threatenin­g not only Africa but the rest of the world as it addresses a number of Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals,” Pswarayi told us.

“Agroecolog­y has not been a topic for discussion at COP meetings. Indication­s on the ground show that the deepening climate crisis, increasing global food insecurity, continued use of synthetic inputs in agricultur­e and general disaffecti­on and negative reviews towards agroecolog­ical principles as sustainabl­e climate adaptation mechanisms speak to the inadequaci­es surroundin­g conversati­ons around agroecolog­y at COP,” she added.

“The COP has become a platform for discussing commercial business interests instead of focusing on critical issues. We would want to see agroecolog­y and sustainabl­e agricultur­al practices taking centre stage at COP28. We would also want to see critical issues affecting Africa’s agricultur­al and food systems being discussed by Africans and having solutions to these problems being proffered by Africans,” Pswarayi said.

One African voice

African leaders have a demographi­c imperative to take up the case of smallholde­rs farmers against Big Agricultur­e at the December 10 food session. From September 4-6, regional heads of state met to adopt a common position for COP28 and one resolution from the resulting “Nairobi Declaratio­n” was to “support smallholde­r farmers, indigenous peoples, and local communitie­s in the green economic transition, given their key role in ecosystems stewardshi­p.”

The “Emirates Declaratio­n” gives the vision a headstart with its pledge for “Scaling-up adaptation and resilience activities and responses in order to reduce the vulnerabil­ity of all farmers . . . including through financial and technical support for solutions . . . that promote sustainabl­e food security, production and nutrition, while conserving, protecting and restoring nature.”

Among 70 percent of Africans working in agricultur­e, according to World Economic Forum estimates, more than 60 percent in the sub-Saharan region are smallholde­r farmers. Government’s preferred support to smallholde­r farmers often include Big Agricultur­e seeds and fertiliser­s presented as political packages.

The Alliance for Food Sovereignt­y in Africa (AFSA) said in its COP28 statement, “The predominan­t agricultur­al model suggested and promoted for Africa is the industrial agricultur­al model, which heavily relies on artificial fertiliser­s and pesticide, which are detrimenta­l to soil quality, biodiversi­ty, and the environmen­t.”

“This model prioritise­s mono cultures over diversity and encourages mass production for export, transporti­ng food over miles and distorting local markets,” the group lamented, urging COP and member countries to move away from unhelpful positions such as carbon credits and vague wording like climate-smart transition.

The upcoming session presents a new opportunit­y for participan­ts to hold powerful actors to account. Sustainabl­e support from the COP platform should include agroecolog­ical practices, preventing post-harvest losses and preparing for climate shocks.

Unlocking climate finance for

inclusive solutions

In Zimbabwe, smallholde­r farmers, who depend on rain-fed agricultur­e, have been practising a water conservati­on zero-tillage method promoted by Government known as Pfumvudza/ Intwasa. Going into COP28, Environmen­t and Climate Secretary Matondi expects financial and technical support for the farmers whom he says have stabilised the country’s food security situation.

He said climate change mitigation has to take aboard farmers, youths, economical­ly vulnerable groups, women and those who are on the margins of society as participan­ts and beneficiar­ies in the discussion. He also addressed the much-deferred unlocking of climate finance to strengthen local efforts.

“We need to revisit the US$100 billion climate finance pledge that ended in 2020. Now it’s just something that is discussed on the sidelines but we want to see more commitment­s around it and the issues about human and capacity developmen­t, the issues of ensuring that new technologi­es, new sciences based on artificial or natural intelligen­ce are put to use to be able to help all of us in terms of mitigating the effect of climate change,” Matondi detailed.

Pswarayi of Pelum levelled the blame of food insecurity crises in African countries at the commercial­isation of industrial agricultur­al practices and said she expects the global north to honour its commitment­s to mitigating climate change.

“In this year’s COP28, we are expecting that the meeting delivers on the key issues arising from previously held meetings in relation to addressing climate issues that are affecting farmers from the global south especially now when the effects of El Nino are widespread and affecting farmers,” Pswarayi said.

Just structural shifts

In the context of disrupted rainfall patterns and warmer temperatur­es, Dr Leonard Unganai of British nonprofit Oxfam told us that dependence on rain-fed agricultur­e comes across as one reason for wide-scale vulnerabil­ity to climate change in Zimbabwe. Depleted water resources, poor soils, high population density, deforestat­ion, siltation of rivers and poor management of natural resources affect demographi­cs at the bottom of the economic pyramid. In this sense, any climate action has to go beyond subsistenc­e handouts to brave structural changes that include agroecolog­y, he said.

“The situation is really desperate, we need the world to recommit itself to achieving the Paris Agreement goals as a minimum,” said Unganai, who has worked directly with thousands of Zimbabwean farmers to build resilience against climate change.

“We really need to work on the key drivers of climate change which is greenhouse gas emissions and we hope with the current host of Cop 28 being a major oil producer we just hope they will be able to steer the meeting in a way that produces a balanced outcome.”

Unganai warned against abrupt shifts that do not pay heed to the damage that might happen through such a transition.

“We are calling for a just transition in agricultur­e just like we call for just transition in energy,” he said.

“We don’t want any transition in energy to worsen existing imqualitie­s especially from a gender perspectiv­e. We know women form the bulk of agricultur­al producers and we wouldn’t want to see any further worsening of inequaliti­es in terms of access to resources, access to food, and all those issues that come with any transition so any transition has to be just,” said Unganai.

Meanwhile, oil giants and oil guzzlers are expected to push for carbon capture and carbon storage technologi­es at the ongoing climate summit.

Wording of resolution­s has been contested for not explicitly naming use of fossil fuels as the main driver of global warming just as non-committal phrasing has been under fire with respect to food system pledges. ◆ Feedback: jeffgogo@gmail.com

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