Food security starts from the ground up

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Soils are the forgotten ecosystem service, says Maurizio Guadagni, rural development specialist at the World Bank.  But he is out to change that.  For him they are the key to food security, to biodiversity protection and especially to mitigating and adapting to climate change.

Guadagni is connected to the new Bridging Agriculture and Conservation Initiative, launched in Brazil in July by Bioversity International with global partners.  His pitch is for soils to be at the heart of “climate-smart agriculture”.

Since publishing a report called Turn Down The Heat last November, which probed a possible world four degrees warmer, the Bank “has significantly increased its focus on climate change,” Guadagni says.  “Our new President Jim Yong Kim is giving a lot of attention to the issue and to the links with agriculture, a topic that is dear to me.”

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Changes estimates that 14 per cent of carbon emissions come from farming.  That figure doubles if clearance of forests for farming is included.  “Jointly, agriculture and forestry have more potential to mitigate climate change than the energy sector,” he says.

Read the full post here.

By Fred Pearce

This blog is part of the Agriculture and Ecosystems Blog’s month-long series on Restoring Landscapes.