C-NEWS BUREAU CHIEF
ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA: Addressing delegates at a recent crucial high-level gathering on climate finance for agriculture and food security, Frank K. Tumwebaze, Uganda’s Minister of Agriculture, Animal Industry, and Fisheries, underscored the profound impact of climate change on Africa’s economic trajectory and its pivotal role in exacerbating challenges to food, feed, and nutrition security.
Minister Tumwebaze highlighted a spectrum of adverse effects stemming from climate change, including diminished agricultural yields, reduced animal growth rates, and disruptions to pastoral systems’ productivity. Notably, he referenced the alarming emergence of altered patterns in pest and disease outbreaks, typified by recent incidents such as the Desert locust and the fall armyworm infestations, alongside other detrimental livestock diseases.
The minister’s remarks resonated with the dire findings outlined in the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change’s (IPCC) Sixth Assessment Report, which sounded a clarion call for immediate, concerted action to mitigate climate change’s ravaging effects on agrifood systems and to tackle the looming specter of hunger.
Despite Africa’s relatively minimal contribution to global greenhouse gas emissions, Tumwebaze emphasized the continent’s stark vulnerability to climate change impacts, particularly within the realms of agriculture and food security. He underscored the irony that while Africa bears minimal culpability for climate change, its populace shoulders a disproportionate burden of its consequences, with farmers bearing the brunt of climatic adversities.
Notably, Tumwebaze drew attention to the escalating phenomenon of population displacements driven by climate-induced hazards, often intertwined with surging levels of hunger, food insecurity, and malnutrition. These cascading challenges, he stressed, necessitate multifaceted responses, including the establishment of robust early warning systems to anticipate and mitigate impending crises.
In light of mounting climate-related risks, Tumwebaze issued a resounding call to action for African nations to urgently ramp up adaptation and resilience measures, leveraging mitigation efforts as a concomitant priority. He stressed the imperative of collective commitment to the Paris Agreement’s objectives, entailing concerted efforts to curtail emissions and fortify defenses against climate change impacts.
Reflecting on Uganda’s national agenda, Tumwebaze outlined a strategic framework aligned with the country’s development imperatives, including the National Development Plan III, the Parish Development Model, and the Agriculture Value-Chain Development Strategy. Emphasizing the imperative of agroindustrialization, he delineated key interventions aimed at bolstering climate resilience and augmenting production and productivity across agricultural sectors.
These interventions encompassed a spectrum of initiatives, ranging from the promotion of climate-resilient seed varieties to the adoption of mechanization and irrigation technologies. Notably, Tumwebaze underscored the imperative of proactive measures to counteract seasonal pest and disease outbreaks, alongside concerted efforts to educate and mobilize farmers toward climate-smart agricultural practices.
In a rallying cry to African Union member states, development partners, and international allies, Tumwebaze implored stakeholders to align technical and financial support behind initiatives geared toward enhancing climate resilience and income security. Central to this endeavor, he emphasized, was the imperative of empowering vulnerable smallholder farmers to transition from subsistence to commercial farming, thereby catalyzing broader transformations within food systems.
As the specter of climate change looms ever larger, Tumwebaze’s impassioned appeal underscores the urgency of concerted, collaborative action to safeguard Africa’s agrarian future and fortify its resilience against the gathering storm of climatic upheaval.
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