FAO Urges Nations Across the World to Support Agroforestry

person access_time   4 Min Read 08 July 2019

More robust policy support is needed to reap the benefits of growing trees near crops and livestock, the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation said at an agro-forestry summit in France on May 25, 2019. “Agroforestry isn’t a ‘no man’s land’ between forestry and agriculture and should receive specific policy support,” FAO Deputy Director General for Climate and Natural Resources, Maria Helena Semedo said in an opening address to the 4th World Agroforestry Congress.

“Agroforestry can help diversify and sustain (food) production and provide vital social, economic and environmental benefits for land use rs at all scales,” Semedo underlined. The term refers to land-use systems and technologies where woody perennials - trees, shrubs, palms, bamboos and the like - are deliberately used in the same plots as agricultural crops or livestock to foster ecological synergies.

The approach is gaining in interest due to its ability to sequester carbon and mitigate climate change and to broaden the social, economic and environmental sustainability of rural development, according to FAO. The deliberate use of trees in mixed-use agricultural land systems can also make substantial contributions to the conservation of biodiversity, Semedo noted. “Traditional agroforestry systems contain between 50 and 80 per cent of the plant species diversity found in comparable natural forests,” Semedo stated. As trees often take
years to mature, secure land tenure is especially crucial in promoting agroforestry, Semedo warned.

She cited a project in Uganda where farmers were paid the market value of timber for not felling trees, leading to a decline in local deforestation rates. The project is one of several case studies provided in agroforestry guidelines for policymakers, programme managers and farmers which FAO issued at the summit.

Up to 70 percent of the land in many developing countries is administered through complex customary rules that often disadvantage women, who may face cultural taboos on cultivating certain types of trees or be banned from planting any if doing so entails an ownership claim, said FAO. The Montpellier summit is being attended by more than 1,200 practitioners, researchers, students and business and civic leaders from more than 100 countries.

You may also like to read

folder_openRelated tags
shareShare article
×
×