Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT,...

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Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT, on behalf of CGIAR) Regional Consultation Meeting on the Development of the Global Climate Change Network in Latin America and the Caribbean UNEP, 18-19 May 2009, Mexico City, Mexico

Transcript of Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT,...

Page 1: Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT, on behalf of CGIAR) Regional Consultation Meeting.

Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research

Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research

Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT, on behalf of CGIAR)

Regional Consultation Meeting on the Development of the Global Climate Change Network in Latin America and the CaribbeanUNEP, 18-19 May 2009, Mexico City, Mexico

Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT, on behalf of CGIAR)

Regional Consultation Meeting on the Development of the Global Climate Change Network in Latin America and the CaribbeanUNEP, 18-19 May 2009, Mexico City, Mexico

Page 2: Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT, on behalf of CGIAR) Regional Consultation Meeting.

The Centers of the Consultative Group on International Agricultural Research

Page 3: Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT, on behalf of CGIAR) Regional Consultation Meeting.

Some approaches in CGIAR climate change agenda

Better forecasts, policy options: provide local and regional information that combines forecasting knowledge with expertise in farming systems

Developing climate-ready crops capable of withstanding increased temperatures, drought, and flooding

More efficient use of resources: improving farmers’ ability to use water efficiently and to better manage fragile soils essential to adapt to the shocks of climate change

Page 4: Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT, on behalf of CGIAR) Regional Consultation Meeting.

Impact of Climate Change

At least US$ 7 billion per year in additional funding is required to finance the research, rural infrastructure, and irrigation investments needed to offset the negative effects of climate change on human well-being The mix of investments differs by region: Sub-Saharan Africa requires the greatest overall investment and a greater share of investments in roads, Latin America in agricultural research, and Asia in irrigation efficiency

Source: Nelson, G.C. et al. 2009. Climate Change Impact on Agriculture and Costs of Adaptation. IFPRI, Washington D.C. http://www.ifpri.org/sites/default/files/publications/pr21.pdf

Page 5: Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT, on behalf of CGIAR) Regional Consultation Meeting.

Daily per capita availability

Source: Nelson, G.C. et al. 2009. Climate Change Impact on Agriculture and Costs of Adaptation. IFPRI, Washington D.C. http://www.ifpri.org/sites/default/files/publications/pr21.pdf

Page 6: Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT, on behalf of CGIAR) Regional Consultation Meeting.

Sector analysis: Colombia

50-60% farmers (about 70% of the agricultural work) are smallholders

Agriculture accounts ~50% of national GHG emissions (Colombia accounts 0.37% of global GHG emissions)

28.6% of agricultural products from above 1200 m

Permanent crops (66.4% GDP) will be severely affected

Source: Andrew Jarvis, CIAT, personal communication

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Page 7: Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT, on behalf of CGIAR) Regional Consultation Meeting.

Evaluating technology options: cassava improvement

Grey areas would get no benefit from drought or flood tolerance.

Blue areas benefit from drought tolerance improvement

Purple areas benefit from flood tolerance improvement

Page 8: Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT, on behalf of CGIAR) Regional Consultation Meeting.

An international SGRP initiative hosted by Bioversity International

Goal

“To enhance the

sustainable management

and use of agrobiodiversity

for meeting human needs

by improving our

knowledge of all its

different aspects”

Page 9: Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT, on behalf of CGIAR) Regional Consultation Meeting.

A new project undertaken by the Platform for Agrobiodiversity Research and partners

Improve the information available to researchers and others on use of agrobiodiversity to help cope with climate change

Identify some key characteristics of production systems around the world where agrobiodiversity is likely to be particularly important for coping with climate change

Explore ways of improving access to, and availability of, new crop diversity from ex situ genebanks to rural communities and indigenous peoples

Example: Working with indigenous peoples in Bolivia and Sarawak together with PROINPA and the Sarawak Biodiversity Centre

Source: Toby Hodgkin, Bioversity International, personal communication

Page 10: Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT, on behalf of CGIAR) Regional Consultation Meeting.

Genetic dissection of drought tolerance at CIMMYT

10 segregating populations

F2/3, F3/4 and RIL families / hybrids

Mexico, Zimbabwe, Kenya

30 stress environments

About 350 morphological traits

About 70 physiological parameters

About 3,000 QTL data pointsSource: M. Bänziger et al., CIMMYT

Page 11: Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT, on behalf of CGIAR) Regional Consultation Meeting.

CIMMYT heat-tolerance screening (leaf chlorophyll content - LCC) for 2,225 wheat landraces (Reynolds et al. 1999)

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Page 12: Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT, on behalf of CGIAR) Regional Consultation Meeting.

Cropping systems ID {“hot spots”}

Passport data analysis of accessions from heat-stress prone areas (GIS tools)

Characterization data available from thermo-screening

Multi-site testing temperature data and crop performance or any other assessment

Modeling “heat impacts” on crops in target population of environments

Page 13: Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT, on behalf of CGIAR) Regional Consultation Meeting.

Germplasm enhancement by design

Guided- crop physiology H0 testing (leading to defining ideotypes for crop breeding)

Temperature component fine-tuning in crop modelsInstrumentation from remote sensing to trait recording

in the experimental fields or greenhousesMolecular trait analysis – reverse geneticsAllele discovery, comparative biology (synteny) Cross-breeding targeting “hot spots”

MAIN OUTPUT: Genetically-enhanced seed-embedded technology (GESET) to “beat the heat” and water stresses

Page 14: Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT, on behalf of CGIAR) Regional Consultation Meeting.

Conservation agriculture: saving resources and money

Conservation agriculture includes minimal soil disturbance, retaining an adequate cover of crop residues, and use of economically viable crop rotations

Conservation tillage leads to net savings of diesel use per hectare, greatly reduces water use, and lower CO2 emissions

Resource conserving technology practices provide a better soil cover, moderate soil temperatures, and reduce the evaporation of irrigation water

Page 15: Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT, on behalf of CGIAR) Regional Consultation Meeting.

N2O a potent greenhouse gas generated through use of manure or N fertilizer

Reduced emissions (50% less) possible in intensive irrigated wheat systems by proper amounts and timing of N applications.

Use of infrared sensor to measure yield potential as plants grow

Normalized Differential Vegetative Index (NVDI)

Reducing emissions of nitrous oxide

Source: I. Ortiz-Monasterio, CIMMYT

Page 16: Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT, on behalf of CGIAR) Regional Consultation Meeting.

Climate change in the Semi-Arid Tropics

Source: D. Hoisington, ICRISAT, personal communication

Page 17: Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT, on behalf of CGIAR) Regional Consultation Meeting.

The innovation paradigm in agriculture

Impacts =

[Info, Knowledge, Technology] Agro-

Ecosystems

Management Policy Institutions

People indicates multiplicative interactions

Page 18: Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT, on behalf of CGIAR) Regional Consultation Meeting.

The CGIAR Challenge Program on Climate Change, Food Security and Agriculture

A CGIAR-Earth System Science Partnership joint undertaking with other partners

Page 19: Climate change adaptation in Latin America and the Caribbean: CGIAR research Rodomiro Ortiz (CIMMYT, on behalf of CGIAR) Regional Consultation Meeting.

Further information

CGIAR Climate Change Challenge Program: Bruce Campbell, Director, CGIAR Challenge Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security, [email protected]

Agro-biodiversity: Marleni Ramírez, Director for Latin America and the Caribbean, Bioversity International, [email protected]

Agro-forestry: Tony Simons, Deputy-Director General, World Agroforestry Center, [email protected]

Arid Zones: Marteen van Ginkel, Deputy-Director General of Research, ICARDA; [email protected]

Fishery: Patrick Dugan, Deputy-Director General, WorldFish Center, [email protected] Food Policy: Mark Rosegrant, Director for Environment and Production Technology, IFPRI,

[email protected]: Robert Nasi, Program Director, CIFOR, [email protected] Livestock: John McDermott, Deputy Director General, ILRI, [email protected] Maize, wheat (incl. conservation agriculture in respective cropping systems): Marianne

Bänziger, Deputy-Director General for Research & Partnerships, CIMMYT, [email protected]

Potato, sweetpotato, Andes: Charles Crissman, Deputy-Director General, CIP, [email protected]

Semi-Arid Tropics: David Hoisington, Deputy-Director General of Research, ICRISAT; [email protected]

Tropical agriculture (including bean-, cassava-, forage-, fruit- and rice- cropping systems): Andrew Jarvis, Program Leader on Decision and Policy Analysis, CIAT, [email protected]

Water: David Molden, Deputy-Director General, IWMI, [email protected]