PRESS
RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
FAO TO PARTNER WITH FARA AND CONTINENTAL
INSTITUTIONS TO PUSH THE AFRICAN CSA AGENDA
04/12/2020. ACCRA
– The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has pledged its commitment to
providing support for Africa’s climate-smart agriculture agenda.
Speaking at the Biennial Climate-Smart Agriculture
(CSA) stakeholders conference organized by the Forum for Agricultural Research
in Africa, Dr. Ade Freeman, Regional Program Leader, FAO Regional Office for
Africa, called on FARA to lead the charge to drive the continental CSA agenda.
Dr. Freeman also indicated FAO’s readiness to provide financial support to FARA
and the continental institutions for the realization of the climate-smart
agriculture agenda.
“We invite FARA to take the lead and FAO
will be happy to work with you…and to put some money behind this and make sure
that when we meet the next time we will be talking about concrete initiatives
to influence investment… to drive the African CSA agenda”
Dr. Freeman also charged the stakeholders to
fast-track what needs to happen to how we can get it done. This revolves around
mechanisms, institutions and processes that are required, policies that need to
be put in place, platforms that need to be established not only to share
information but also to hold discussions around translating policies into
actions. He called for focus on integrated approaches and synergy in
objectives.
According to the FAO Regional Program Leader, the FAO
and African Development Bank (AfDB) have been discussing ways to link the
available knowledge and the technical assistance to the needed investment to
drive climate-smart agriculture in Africa. He underscored the importance of
synergy in the approach to addressing the resource needs for climate change
issues.
“If FAO is talking about technical
assistance and the AfDB is talking about investments, it’s not going to happen.
We need to bring these two together. The goal is to link the knowledge, the
policy, the technical assistance with investment, and this includes investment
from the private sector. We have the capacity to do so…”
Dr. Freeman also called for collaborative efforts to
identify and formulate concrete initiatives that can be presented as a good
business case for CSA to attract private sector investment from development
finance institutions.
Contributing to a panel discussion on the implication
of policy, advocacy and resource mobilization for advancing CSA in Africa, Dr.
Martins Fregene, Director of Agriculture and AgroIndustry at the African
Development Bank said, there appears to be enough content in terms of policies
and frameworks on CSA on the continent and what is required at the moment, is
the synergy that connects governments and institutions.
“African countries need to put in
processes that enhance synergies between institutions and governments to work
at achieving the CSA agenda”.
Christophe Larose, Head of Sector, Sustainable
Agriculture at the European Commission, on his part indicated that climate
change is exerting pressure on the already stretched natural resource systems
and called for policy alignment and support for institutions in addressing
climate change.
Ms. Nora Berrahmouni, Senior Regional Forestry
Officer, at the FAO Regional Office for Africa who shared her view, said there
was the need to think of CSA as a concept which should be streamlined into
policies at the regional and country levels.
In his closing remarks, the Executive Director of
FARA, Dr. Yemi Akinbamijo called on stakeholders to move the discussions beyond
the conference and begin to take concrete actions towards the realization of
the continent’s CSA aspirations.
“Let us identify and pool institutions on
the continent…It is time to move to concrete actions…FARA should galvanize
institutions to take the CSA discussions off the conference table and begin to
walk the talk or else nothing will happen beyond the conference”
The Biennial Climate-Smart Agriculture stakeholders
conference was funded by the European Commission and the International Fund for
Agricultural Development (IFAD). It was organized by FARA and partners
including the CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food
Security (CCAFS), the Global Alliance for Climate-Smart Agriculture (GACSA),
the Food and Agriculture Organization, Agrinatura, the African Union
Development AgencyNEPAD, the Climate Smart Agriculture Youth Network (CSAYN),
the African Group of Negotiators Expert Support (AGNES), the Low Emission
Development Strategies Global Partnership (LEDS GP), AFAAS and the sub-regional
agriculture research organizations.
About FARA
The Forum for Agricultural Research in Africa (FARA)
is the continental apex organization for agricultural research and innovation
in Africa. It is also the body mandated by the African Union Commission (AUC)
and the African Union Development Agency (AUDA)-NEPAD to serve as their
technical arm on agricultural research and innovation. FARA also facilitates
the deployment of science, technology and innovation to accelerate the
achievement of the continent’s agriculture and food security targets as set out
in the Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Program (CAADP) and the 2014
Malabo declaration on accelerated African agricultural growth and
transformation. FARA works in close cooperation with the sub-regional
agriculture research organizations (ASARECA, CCARDESA and CORAF) as well as the
African Forum for Agricultural Advisory Services (AFAAS). Together, these
organizations implement the CAADP XP4 program which is co-funded by the
European Commission and IFAD. This program sets out to strengthen the
collaborative capacities of these organizations in supporting countries to implement
a science-led and climate-relevant transformation of their agricultural
systems.
For more information visit: https://faraafrica.org/ Or contact Dr.
Aggrey Agumya aagumya@faraafrica.org,
or Christoph Essikpe cessikpe@faraafrica.org
“-ends-”
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