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Sectors

Agriculture and food Energy

About this sector

Agricultural land covers 38% of the world’s land area46. Of this, 78% is used for livestock grazing/production47. Ensuring global food security is one of the challenges of the new millennium. The global population is projected to increase from 6.7 billion (2006) to 9.2 billion by 2050.


Impacts

  • Habitat loss and degradation for cultivation.
  • Climate change principally from the permanent conversion of forests or long-term grassland to agriculture.
  • Water scarcity and quality from excessive water use.
  • Soil degradation and pollution of waterways.
  • Loss of genetic diversity through intensive
    agricultural systems.
  • Impacts on native species through the introduction
    of invasive species.

Opportunities/Risks

  • Access to new revenue streams and markets: through the growing demand for certified sustainable foods or the development of functional foods, flavours and fragrances.
  • Opportunities for investment and increased efficiency: efficiencies realised through the development of new technologies, raw materials and processes that enable minimised resource use and degradation, and supply chain resilience.
  • Regulatory and compliance: emergence of new government policies such as liability, taxes, moratoria on extractive activities and rationing of scarce resources.

Case Studies


Supporting Pesticide-free Cotton Farms that Contribute to Greener Agriculture and a Better Environment

Supporting Pesticide-free Cotton Farms that Contribute to Greener Agriculture and a Better Environment

Tsubame Towel Corporation is encouraging the spread of environmentally friendly organic cotton and also supporting the work of organic farmers in India.

Hokkaido Fuyumizu-tambo (Winter-flooded Rice Paddies) Project

Hokkaido Fuyumizu-tambo (Winter-flooded Rice Paddies) Project

This project has established a wet-paddy winter approach for Hokkaido and is a multifaceted endeavor with myriad benefits, among them establishing and spreading farming rice paddies without the use of pesticides or chemical fertilizers. This has contributed to the conservation of biodiversity and the production of rice that is both safe and has added value. In addition, it has also helped environmental education and the development of local communities.

Biodiversity monitoring

Biodiversity monitoring

Nestlé is a multinational packaged foods company founded in 1922 and headquartered in Vevey, Switzerland, with a market capitalization of over $93 billion Canadian. It employs approximately 3,500 people in Canada who work in the company’s more than 20 facilities, including manufacturing, sales, and distribution centers. Nestlé Waters Canada is Canada’s largest manufacturer and distributor of bottled water and operates 2 bottling plants across Canada. Other than bottled water, Nestlé product lines include coffee, juice, ice cream, baby food/formula, healthcare nutrition, pet care, confectionery and pharmaceuticals.


Tools and Mechanisms


FairWild

FairWild

http://www.fairwild.org/

Fairwild endeavours to provide a worldwide framework for implementing a sustainable, fair, and value-added management and trading system for wild-collected natural ingredients and products thereof.
GLOBALG.A.P

GLOBALG.A.P

http://www.globalgap.org/cms/front_content.php?idc...

GLOBALG.A.P. is a private sector body that sets voluntary standards for the certification of production processes of agricultural (including aquaculture) products around the globe.

The GLOBALG.A.P. standard is primarily designed to reassure consumers about how food is produced on the farm by minimising detrimental environmental impacts of farming operations, reducing the use of chemical inputs and ensuring a responsible approach to worker health and safety as well as animal welfare.

Better Sugarcane Initiative

Better Sugarcane Initiative

http://www.bonsucro.com/

Bonsucro is a multistakeholder collaboration working to provide standards and a certification scheme incorporating a set of principles, criteria, indicators and verifiers that certify farmers who produce sustainable sugar. The standard contains specific reference to biodiversity and was finalised in November 2009.
World Cocoa Foundation (WCF)

World Cocoa Foundation (WCF)

http://www.worldcocoafoundation.org/

The WCF endeavours to encourage the development of sustainable cocoa while raising incomes through training, building cooperatives for more effective marketing, reducing crop loss, and improving productivity. The WFC has a set of principles in place which refer directly to Biodiversity to which members commit.
International Federation of Organic Agriculture Movements (IFOAM)

International Federation of Organic Agriculture Movements (IFOAM)

http://www.ifoam.org

IFOAM is an umbrella organization for the organic movement, uniting more than 750 member organizations in 116 countries. IFOAM standards include general principles, standards, and certifications for biodiversity conservation on farms.

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Agriculture and food

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