'Business as Usual', or what we could term 'capitalist business' is responsible for the state of the world, it's worsening environment and the enormous inequity of its people - and only a mass movement of world society can change that. To shift gears will mean shifting vehicles - from capitalism to socialism. There really is no other choice and the time is now.
Climate Change: Time To Shift Gears In Agriculture
At the recently concluded G-20 Heads of the State
meeting in Brisbane, host Australia tried its best to keep climate change out
of the final communique. It was only after the United States and European Union
exerted pressure that the final declaration had a vague statement about climate
change.
The Brisbane declaration finally had a paragraph that
supported strong and effective action to address climate change, consistent
with sustainable economic growth and certainty for business and investment, a
reaffirmed G-20 resolve to adopt the recommendations, protocol and legal
instruments agreed at the 21st Conference of Parties to the UN
Framework Convention on Climate Change scheduled to be held in Paris in 2015.
The G-20 reluctance to address the global concerns over
climate change comes a few days after US President Barack Obama and the Chinese
President Xi Jinping, heading the two biggest polluting countries, announced a so-called
promising US-China agreement on greenhouse gas emission. Accordingly, while
China will make its best efforts to peak its carbon dioxide emissions by 2030,
the US has set-up a target of reducing its emissions by 28% in 2030 from the
commitments it made for the 2005 level.
While the US media has hailed this as a ‘potentially
landmark climate change agreement’ in reality it is a sweet deal benefit both
the polluting countries. The Centre for Science and Environment, New Delhi, has
in an analysis shown that both the US and China have worked out a mutually
convenient programme of inaction that allows both the countries the freedom to
pollute.
China has to do nothing to limit or reduce its
emissions for the next 16 years, by which time its per capita emissions would
reach around 12-13 tons. The US, which had a target to reduce emissions by 17
per cent by 2020, will now get a breather and its per capita emissions will
also equal 12 to 13 ton by 2030. In
other words, both US and China have crafted a self-serving deal while the world
not only mutely looks on, but also applauds.
In contrast, India’s per capita emissions which hover
around 1.6 ton of carbon dioxide equivalent at present, is not expected to
exceed 4 ton by 2030.
Since both US and China are responsible for more than
40 per cent of the greenhouse gas emissions, the freedom to pollute unhindered
for the next 16 years has serious implications for the global climate. Needless
to say worst impact of the resulting climate change is being felt by developing
and least developed countries, who have hardly any role in the acerbating the
crisis. Rising temperatures is leading to serious climate disruptions,
resulting in melting of glaciers and the rising of ocean levels. The impact is
going to be catastrophic on food and water, with many experts pointing to
escalating political crisis within and among nations as a consequence.
One-third of the global greenhouse gas emissions
actually come from agriculture and forestry. According to the Consultative
Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR), which governs the 15
agricultural research centres, “reducing agriculture’s carbon footprint is
central to limiting climate change.”Food production system, including deforestation
and land-use changes, account for the release of 12,000 megatonnes of carbon
dioxide equivalent into the atmosphere every year. Such a huge contribution to
greenhouse gas emissions is not only leading to climatic aberrations but also
necessitates adaption and mitigation technologies for the small farmers who
face the brunt.
Considering the role agriculture plays in climate
change, a pro-active stand on food security from G-20 was expected. Although
food security figured prominently in the Seoul Development Consensus in 2010,
and did get a push with the development of an Action Plan on Food Price
Volatility and Agriculture under the French presidency in 2011, everything
ended with the formation of the Agricultural Market Information System (AMIS).
Except for the usual rhetoric and an unsuccessful attempt to create food
reserves in western Africa, food security has for all practical purposes
disappeared from the G-20 agenda.
In the 2013 declaration, G-20 did emphasis on the
central theme of food security. The G-20 Food Security and Nutrition Framework do
recognize “the importance of boosting agricultural productivity, investment and
trade to strengthen the global food system to promote economic growth and job
creation.” However, except for the usual talk of assistance to smallholder
agriculture to boost productivity, the Framework does not talk of addressing
the systemic problems that has led to global agriculture turning into a major
villain of climate change. The Framework itself reads well, and does mention
that business as usual may not be the right approach but still the underlying
emphasis is on more of the same.
The CGIAR does admit that the food-related emissions
and the impact of climate change will profoundly alter the way we grow food
crops, but the G-20 Framework talks of integrating smallholders into markets.
In a way, integrating farmers with global markets and bringing in more
investments to enhance productivity – which is what the World Economic Forum
too desires – only shows that no lessons have been learnt from the climate
debacle. Intensive farming is what led to agriculture becoming the biggest
contributor to climate change, and therefore it is futile to accept that more
intensive farming will reduce greenhouse gas emissions in future.
As temperatures rise, and water becomes scarce,
irrigated wheat yields in developing countries are feared to fall by 13 and
rice by 15 per cent by the year 2050. CGIAR also estimates that production of
crops like potato, banana, and other cash crops will dramatically slump.
Several other studies, including those by Indian Agricultural Research
Institute, too points to a bleak farming scenario in the years ahead. But
strangely, while the international effort, especially by the donor agencies, is
to provide financial support to civil society groups for mitigation and
adapting small farmers to the effects of climate change there is no mention of
any serious effort to suitably make systemic changes in the way crops are being
farmed.
While it is true that the G-20 has great convening and
coordinating power over other international actors, it isn’t in a position to
disregard some of the principles that have failed to enhance food security. In
2008, the same prescription of linking crop production to global markets led to
the global food crisis sparking food riots in 37 countries and creating food
deficiencies in several parts. Moreover, the entire thrust of the food security
and climate change deliberations seem to be industry-driven with hardly any
space for reinventing the sustainable agro-ecological methods of farming.
The G-20 Framework on Food Security therefore needs to
be redrawn based on the recommendations of the International Assessment of
Agricultural Knowledge, Science and Technology for Development (IAASTD) which
was an inter-governmental effort under the co-sponsorship of FAO, GEF, UNDP,
UNEP, UNESCO and World Bank. This report, submitted in 2008, calls for a
radical change in the ‘business as usual’ approach.
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