The need for the preservation and study of genetic diversity in agriculture took centre-stage during the FAO’s Commission biennial meeting on Genetic Resources for Food and Agriculture on January 19.
In the context of rapidly advancing climate change and a growing global population, FAO Deputy Director-General Maria Helena Semedo was present at the event to stress the need for prevention plans in action specially to preserve agricultural genetic resources that will feed the world.
“In a warmer world with harsher, more variable weather, plants and animals raised for food will need to have the biological capacity to adapt more quickly than ever before,” the Deputy Director-General said. “Preventing further losses of agricultural genetic resources and diverting more attention to studying them and their potential will boost humankind’s ability to adapt to climate change.”
One of the expected outcomes of this meeting, is a series of guidelines for integrating genetic resources into climate change adaptation plans that the FAO has developed in line with guidance from the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC). The draft guidelines contain a range of recommendations aimed at helping countries to implement them in their policies and strategies.
A representative of the International Seed Federation attended the meeting to share the private sector views on this important subject.
For more information on Biodiversity for Food Security and Nutrition, check out this Flickr Album that FAO posted in 2013:https://www.flickr.com/photos/faooftheun/sets/72157634370501307/.
You can also have a look at this video Emerging, with help from our friends at Suckerpunch, produced for the International Seed Federation: Variety is Life – How the Seed Sector Protects Biodiversity.