A United Nations expert has warned that climate change poses
a major threat to global food security and stressed the need to ditch
industrial agricultural approaches in favor of agro-ecological ones.
"Increased frequency and intensity of extreme weather,
rising temperatures and sea levels, as well as floods and droughts have a
significant impact on the right to food," Hilal Elver said in a statement.
"All these climate incidents will negatively impact on crops, livestock,
fisheries, aquaculture and on people’s livelihoods." She added, the
incidents "could subject an additional 600 million people to malnutrition
by 2080."
Hilal said, "Responding to the food demand through
large-scale production oriented agricultural models is not the right solution. There
is a need for a major shift from industrial agriculture to transformative
systems such as agroecology that support the local food movement, protect small
holder farmers, respect human rights, food democracy and cultural traditions,
and at the same time maintain environmental sustainability and facilitate a
healthy diet." She urged that any agreement coming out of the UN climate
conference "must include a clear commitment by all relevant parties to
ensuring climate justice and food security for all."
Explaining agroecology in an earlier interview, Elver said,
"There are two simple phrases that summarize it: feeding the world without
destroying the planet, and applying ecological principles to agriculture."
Hilal's call echoes a similar statement issued last month by
the international peasant farmer movement La Via Campesina which called for a
"just solution to a global climate crisis" to be prioritized at COP21.
Previous COPs "have continuously failed to protect and advance people's
most fundamental human rights—including the Right to Food—sending delegation
upon delegation to climate talks that prioritize private interests over public
welfare," La Via Campesina stated. But those "corporate solutions are
false solutions, and will not solve the climate crisis," their statement
declares. "Our solutions are real solutions, and should be prioritized by
the UN."
Activists are gearing up for mass climate justice actions
during the climate talks, hoping to put tens of thousands of people on the
streets in a show of people power. "Politicians aren’t the only ones with
power," a call-to-action from 350.org states. "If enough people agree
that it’s time for the world to move in a new direction, and push together, the
world will begin to move."
The World Socialist Movement, however, understands that it
is not “industrial” agriculture per se that is the problem but, in
fact, it's capitalist agriculture. The problem is capital's ceaseless
quest for always greater profits which corrupts food production and ruins the environment. This is the
root cause of the problem. Unless the problem is accurately named and analyzed,
then there will be no solution.
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