Office of the Spokesperson
Department of State
Washington, DC
August 14, 2014
Liberia, Malawi, Niger, Nigeria, Tanzania and the United States
confirmed last week their intention to join the Global Alliance for
Climate Smart Agriculture (GACSA). At the August 4 U.S.-Africa Leaders
Summit event entitled “Resilience and Food Security in a Changing
Climate,” Secretary of State John Kerry announced the United States’
intention to join GACSA and encouraged African countries to participate.
The event highlighted the nexus of food security, climate change, and
resilience – issues that are of particular concern among African
nations, where much of the population, relying on rain-fed agriculture,
is especially vulnerable to the impacts of climate change on rainfall
patterns and seasonal temperatures.
Slated for launch at the UN Secretary General’s Climate Summit on
September 23, GACSA is expected to engage a range of government,
multinational organizations, private sector, farmers and civil society
stakeholders to achieve sustainable increases in agricultural
productivity, greater resilience and a reduction of agriculture-related
greenhouse gas emissions.
The United States supports climate-smart agriculture globally through
its Feed the Future and Global Climate Change initiatives. This year,
USAID initiated ten new Feed the Future Innovation Laboratories to
increase global food security and help smallholder farmers boost incomes
and improve nutrition. These laboratories draw the expertise of top
U.S. universities and developing country research institutions, and will
tackle some of the world’s most challenging agricultural research
problems with the premise of introducing safe, environmentally
sustainable proven and appropriate technologies to the world’s most
vulnerable people.
Earlier this year, the U.S. Department of Agriculture announced the
establishment of seven regional climate hubs to deliver information to
farmers, ranchers and forest landowners in the United States to help
them adapt to climate change and weather variability.
The U.S. State Department also supports targeted programs that
advance climate resilience and food security throughout the world
including through contributions to the multilateral Least Developed
Countries Fund and Special Climate Change Fund and through support for
the Climate and Clean Air Coalition’s new Agriculture Initiative.
Full text of the joint announcement:
Statement of Endorsement for a Global Alliance for Climate-Smart Agriculture
The Malabo Declaration on Accelerated Agricultural Growth and
Transformation for Shared Prosperity includes, in Section VI, a
Commitment to Enhancing Resilience of Livelihoods and Production Systems
to Climate Variability and other related risks. This commitment is
consistent with the aspirations of those supporting the founding, later
this year, of the Global Alliance for Climate-Smart Agriculture (GACSA).
Liberia, Malawi, Niger, Nigeria, Tanzania, and the United States announce our intention to:
• Join and support the Global Alliance for Climate Smart Agriculture
expected to be launched in September of this year at the UN Secretary
General’s Climate Summit.
• Urge other countries, along with civil society organizations, private
sector representatives, farmer organizations, and other enterprises to
join the Global Alliance for Climate-Smart Agriculture to help fulfill
our shared aspirations for strengthened global food and nutrition
security and resilience.
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