Hichilema Recommends Sustainable And Smart Climate Agriculture
….For avoidance of
doubt PELUM advises government to back this pronouncement with a policy and
legal framework to protect indigenous seed for clean and health food
By Francis
Maingaila
Lusaka – 25 -05-
2022 - (Zambia24) - President Hakainde Hichilema has recommended
the practice of sustainable and smart climate agriculture as a way of
mitigating the impact of climate change on food and nutrition security in the
country.
Speaking on
Tuesday night when he addressed the nation on the eve of African Freedom Day,
President Hichilema said food security is vital for the country and promised
that his government will endeavor to always provide not only clean but also
healthy food to citizens.
He said food
security is not only a vital component of a peaceful and prosperous nation but
also empowers citizens with long-term health and wellbeing.
And Participatory
Ecological Land Use Management (PELUM), a network of Civil Society
Organizations working with small-scale farmers in East, Central, and Southern
Africa feels indebted to the Presidential recommendation for the practice of
sustainable and smart climate agriculture in Zambia as a way of mitigating the
impact of climate change on food and
nutrition security in the country.
PELUM Zambia, Programs
Officer, Wilfred Miga told Zambia24 in an exclusive telephone
interview that the term sustainable and smart climate agriculture was
vulnerable to misinterpretation by some agriculture advocates that mistake it
for intensive use of mechanization and chemicals for high yield of food.
Miga, however, was
consoled by the clarification President Hichilema made when he said his
government will endeavor to provide clean and healthy food to people.
He explained that
the only form of sustainable and smart climate agriculture which provide clean
and healthy food to people the world over was agroecology which he said was a
combination of not only research, education, and action but also change that
brought sustainability to the ecological, economic and social aspects of food
systems which are increasingly seen as an approach that can bring the much needed
transformation to food systems.
Miga said there
was substantial evidence to prove that agroecological practices,
including farm diversification and organic agriculture, can make a significant
contribution towards climate adaptation and mitigation targets through food
systems.
He explained that
agroecology can play a major role in climate change adaptation and mitigation
but this needs to be backed by some form of legislation to support the cause.
He also emphasized
the need for the government to introduce a policy and legal framework that will
protect the indigenous seed and food systems to ensure clean and health food.
He said the right
of farmers to grow and share a variety of indigenous seeds should not be taken
away by some laws being pushed by multinational companies and other powerful
people.
"These seeds
belong to our farmers and they have been passed on from generation to
generation, given to them by God himself," Miga explained.
He suggested that
farm diversification has the strongest body of evidence on the impacts of
climate change adaptation, which included positive impacts of diversification
on crop yield, pollination, pest control, nutrient cycling, water regulation,
and soil fertility.
He said
agroecology was a necessary tool that provides more climate change adaptation
and mitigation than conventional agriculture by emphasizing locally relevant
solutions, participatory processes, and co-creation of knowledge that supported
farmers’ capacity to adapt to local conditions.
He observed that
some agroecological practices, including agroforestry, have positive impacts
not only on biodiversity, water regulation, soil carbon, nitrogen and
fertility, and extreme temperature but also in regulating pest, water,
nutrient, and supporting services.
He said adopting
agroecological practices will not only contribute towards the attainment of the
United Nations Sustainable Development Goal (SDG2) but will also offer
solutions to food insecurity.
He advised the
government not only to increase investment for research on agroecology’s
resilience to extreme weather events and climate change mitigation outcomes but
also in research to analyze approaches aligned with agroecology relative to
other agriculture development approaches, across all scales and regions, for
outcomes in multiple dimensions and their trade-offs, including
cost-effectiveness.
Similarly,
Environment, Food Sovereignty, and Climate Justice Activist, Simon Mwamba
regretted the lack of data or scenarios to justify the impacts of
agroecological transitions on economic development
Mwamba told Zambia24
in another telephone interview that improving investment in agroecology for
climate change will require long-term funding modalities, outcome target
setting that includes environmental services and climate benefits, and systemic
change and incentives to build farmer capacities.
He said key
elements of exiting agricultural development programs are not only to increase
support for agroecology but support for climate change outcomes.
According to
Mwamba, this can be done by engaging with local knowledge through participatory
and educational approaches that are effective at adapting technologies to local
contexts, thereby delivering improved adaptation and mitigation.
Rather than
treating climate change adaptation and mitigation as co-benefits, Mwamba
suggested food systems must be actively managed for climate change benefits.
And Caritas Zambia
expressed happiness that the Zambian government has finally begun to speak the
same language advocates of clean and healthy food have been speaking all along.
Former Executive
Director Eugene Kabilika told Zambia24 in an interview that the
initiative president Hakainde Hichilema has taken to encourage the adoption of
farming techniques that are environmentally friendly is welcome.
Kabilika said
Zambia urgently and progressively, there is need to first move towards adopting
agroecology principles for a sustainable food system and climate change
adaptation.
Kabilika said
agroecology was a better tool that will help Zambia to make a shift from
chemical intensive industrial agriculture to ecologically intensive organic farming,
with fantastic benefits for small scale farmers.
He said the
current practice where farmers are required to use hybrid seeds supported with
chemicals to sustain agriculture was not only expensive but has the potential
to destroy the soils.
He observed that
agroecology was cheap and crops grown from organic manure are far more superior
in nutrition content than crops grown using chemical fertilizers.
Copywrite – Zambia24
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