The United Arab Emirates took over the rotating presidency of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) earlier this year, and it's now calling on governments to put food systems and agriculture "at the heart of the climate process," per a press release.
"Current practices also contribute to loss of biodiversity, ecosystem degradation, consumption of 70% of freshwater, and can, in some cases, be associated with negative health impacts," Mariam Almheiri, the UAE's minister of climate change and environment, said in announcing the COP28 Food Systems and Agriculture Agenda on Tuesday in Rome, where the UN Food Systems Summit is taking place.
The agenda, which the UAE says will "drive transformative change to secure a sustainable future for all," is part of the UNFCCC's ambition to keep the global average temperature from rising 1.5 degrees Celsius over pre-industrial levels, at which point the effects of climate change would be irreversible, per the New York Times.
The agenda calls on governments to sign a " Leaders Declaration on Food Systems, Agriculture, and Climate Action" at the summit, which will focus on adaptation, adaptation plans, and national biodiversity strategies and action plans.
The agenda also calls on businesses, farmer and producer organizations, and other non-state
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