| 
			   | 
			
| Line 25: | 
Line 25: | 
|   | *[[Portal:Water and Energy for Food|Water and Energy for Food (WE4F) portal on energypedia]]  |   | *[[Portal:Water and Energy for Food|Water and Energy for Food (WE4F) portal on energypedia]]  | 
|   |  |   |  | 
| − | <br/>
  |   | 
| − | 
  |   | 
| − | <br/>
  |   | 
|   |  |   |  | 
|   |  |   |  | 
| Line 34: | 
Line 31: | 
|   | <references />  |   | <references />  | 
|   |  |   |  | 
|   | + | [[Category:Agriculture]]  | 
|   | + | [[Category:Climate_Change]]  | 
|   | [[Category:Powering_Agriculture]]  |   | [[Category:Powering_Agriculture]]  | 
| − | [[Category:Climate_Change]]
  |   | 
| − | [[Category:Agriculture]]
  |   | 
		Latest revision as of 19:10, 14 July 2020
[edit]  Overview
 
Climate smart agriculture (CSA) is an integrative approach to address these interlinked challenges of food security and climate change, that explicitly aims for three objectives:
- sustainably increasing agricultural productivity, to support equitable increases in farm incomes, food security and development;
 - adapting and building resilience of agricultural and food security systems to climate change at multiple levels;
 - reducing greenhouse gas emissions from agriculture (including crops, livestock and sheries).
 
CSA invites to consider these three objectives together at different scales - from farm to landscape – at different levels - from local to global - and over short and long time horizons, taking into account national and local specifcities and priorities[1]
[edit]  The Need for a Climate Smart Approach 
In this video Leslie Lipper, Senior Environmental Economist with FAO, elaborates on the need for a climate smart approach to production, what that means and examples of how this approach has worked.
[edit]  Further Information
 
[edit]  References 
- ↑ FAO, 2014. About Climate Smart Agriculture. http://www.fao.org/climatechange/climatesmart/en/