Saturday, May 2, 2026
FB X LI YT
Breaking
Tinubu appoints Gbajabiamila, Masari to oversee APC NASS primaries ATTEMPT 🇳🇬⚠️: B-Red Narrowly Escapes Alleged Assassination Plot in Osogbo – Osun Govt Orders Manhunt True State Police Decentralization Is the Role of Federal Legislators, Not the IGP — TYF LAGOS 2027: Hamzat Presented to Remi Tinubu as APC Consensus Governorship Candidate Supreme Court nullifies PDP Ibadan convention, deals blow to Makinde-backed faction BREAKING 🇳🇬⚖️: Army Exposes Alleged Coup Plot – Financial Trails, Secret Meetings Uncovered Jandor withdraws from Lagos 2027 guber race, aligns with Tinubu’s endorsement of Hamzat Tinubu approves N2 billion relief for victims of Jos killings — Presidential intervention intensifies after Palm Sunday massacre
CLIMATE CHANGE

IFAD urges global leaders to support small-scale farmers in biodiversity conservation at COP16

October 29, 2024 2 min read

October 29, 2024

By Samuel Ogunsona

The United Nations’ International Fund for Agricultural Development (IFAD) is calling on global leaders at the UN Biodiversity Conference (CBD COP16) in Cali, Colombia, to prioritize small-scale farmers in the fight against biodiversity loss and climate change.

IFAD emphasizes that these farmers are crucial in sustainably growing diverse crops for local and global consumption, particularly for the 3 billion people who cannot afford a healthy diet.

With the global population projected to reach 9.7 billion by 2050, transforming agri-food systems to become more sustainable and biodiversity-friendly is essential.

“Addressing this challenge requires adopting agroecological practices and promoting agrobiodiversity.

“IFAD recognizes the interconnectedness of environmental degradation and climate crises, and we need holistic solutions to tackle both.” said Oliver Page, IFAD’s Climate Change and Environmental Specialist.

Following the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework, IFAD has committed to delivering a people-focused approach, balancing nature, livelihoods, and food security. The organization has adopted a biodiversity strategy to incorporate protection, sustainable use, and promotion of biodiversity in its operations.

Biodiversity is vital to sustainable agri-food systems, supporting ecosystem services like water purification and nutrient cycling, valued at $125 trillion annually. However, biodiversity loss weakens ecosystems, threatening life support.

Small-scale farmers, Indigenous Peoples, youth, women, and value chain partners in developing countries can preserve biodiversity but require more support through direct access to financing. Currently, they receive less than 1% of global climate finance.

IFAD is scaling up partnerships with financing entities, including the Global Environment Facility and the Green Climate Fund, to address the $700 billion per year biodiversity finance gap.

IFAD aims to ensure sustainable food systems and address the interconnected challenges of climate change, biodiversity loss, and food insecurity.