Climate-smart agriculture global research agenda: Scientific basis for action
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Date
2014Author
Steenwerth, Kerri L.
Hodson, Amande K.
Bloom, Arnold J.
Carter, Michael R.
Cattaneo, Andrea
Chartres, Colin J.
Hatfield, Jerry L.
Henry, Kevin
Hopmans, Jan W.
Horwath, William R.
Jenkins, Bryan M.
Kebreab, Ermias
Leemans, Rik
Lipper, Leslie
Lubell, Mark N.
Msangi, Siwa
Prabhu, Ravi
Reynolds, Matthew P.
Solis, Samuel Sandoval
Sischo, William M.
Springborn, Michael
Tittonell, Pablo
Wheeler, Stephen M.
Vermeulen, Sonja J.
Wollenberg, Eva K.
Jarvis, Lovell S.
Jackson, Louise E.
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Background: Climate-smart agriculture (CSA) addresses the challenge of meeting the growing demand for food,
fibre and fuel, despite the changing climate and fewer opportunities for agricultural expansion on additional lands.
CSA focuses on contributing to economic development, poverty reduction and food security; maintaining and
enhancing the productivity and resilience of natural and agricultural ecosystem functions, thus building natural
capital; and reducing trade-offs involved in meeting these goals. Current gaps in knowledge, work within CSA, and
agendas for interdisciplinary research and science-based actions identified at the 2013 Global Science Conference
on Climate-Smart Agriculture (Davis, CA, USA) are described here within three themes: (1) farm and food systems,
(2) landscape and regional issues and (3) institutional and policy aspects. The first two themes comprise crop physiology
and genetics, mitigation and adaptation for livestock and agriculture, barriers to adoption of CSA practices,
climate risk management and energy and biofuels (theme 1); and modelling adaptation and uncertainty, achieving
multifunctionality, food and fishery systems, forest biodiversity and ecosystem services, rural migration from climate
change and metrics (theme 2). Theme 3 comprises designing research that bridges disciplines, integrating stakeholder
input to directly link science, action and governance.
Outcomes: In addition to interdisciplinary research among these themes, imperatives include developing (1) models
that include adaptation and transformation at either the farm or landscape level; (2) capacity approaches to examine
multifunctional solutions for agronomic, ecological and socioeconomic challenges; (3) scenarios that are validated by
direct evidence and metrics to support behaviours that foster resilience and natural capital; (4) reductions in the risk
that can present formidable barriers for farmers during adoption of new technology and practices; and (5) an
understanding of how climate affects the rural labour force, land tenure and cultural integrity, and thus the
stability of food production. Effective work in CSA will involve stakeholders, address governance issues, examine
uncertainties, incorporate social benefits with technological change, and establish climate finance within a green
development framework. Here, the socioecological approach is intended to reduce development controversies
associated with CSA and to identify technologies, policies and approaches leading to sustainable food production
and consumption patterns in a changing climate.
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