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Dear friends and colleagues, This article was written and distributed by IPS news agency. It was published in the South-North Development Monitor (SUNS) #7054 dated 6 December 2010. We thank IPS and SUNS for permission to re-distribute this article. With best wishes, Lim Li Ching ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- So says Andres Gonzalez, coordinator of the Joint Programme on Integration of Ecosystems and Adaptation to Climate Change in the Colombian Massif, carried out for the last three years by United Nations agencies. In the southwestern Colombian department (province)
of Valle del Cauca, indigenous people and scientists are working together
on ways to adapt to climate change. But this is an exceptional case
in This year, a network of seed savers or "guardianes" has been set up to preserve the seeds of tubers, maize, fruit trees, fodder species, quinoa, amaranth and other food crops of high nutritional value, and to promote seed exchanges among the autonomous indigenous reserves of Purace, Paletara, Coconuco, Quintana and Poblazon. Plots of land to acclimatise the seeds have also
been created, as well as six agricultural schools where scientists and
small farmers study and discuss food security, sustainable production,
risk management and healthy environments. About 1,000 families from
the municipalities of The programme's direct impact area in Valle del Cauca has a population of 11,000, but it is estimated that its wider benefits extend to over 240,000 people. Gonzalez hopes that funding for the project, which has another six months to run, will be renewed. Historically, land conflicts have been frequent between the indigenous reserves, small farmers and large landowners. However, all sides signed "Pactos de Convivencia" (peaceful coexistence agreements) and worked together to draw up calendars of production activities and lists of species resistant to various climate conditions. But "much remains to be done. Establishing a dialogue in which we can understand the logic (of peasants and indigenous people) and they can understand ours, is a major challenge," Gonzalez told IPS. The project, sponsored by the Millennium Development Goals Achievement Fund (MDG-F), is headed by a team that includes representatives of native communities, who act as "counterparts to our technicians and experts, and ensure that their concepts and worldview are a fully respected part of the programme," he said. The MDGs, adopted by UN member states in 2000, include specific targets to curb poverty, hunger, maternal and child mortality, gender inequality, and diseases like HIV/AIDS and malaria, as well as to achieve universal primary education, environmental sustainability and a global partnership for development, by 2015. Indigenous people and small farmers could not have been left out of the leadership of the Colombian climate change adaptation project, because their acute observations and empirical knowledge are so precise, Gonzalez said. In And agriculture is already being affected by climate change, for instance, the greater intensity and frequency of extreme weather phenomena -- floods, frosts and droughts -- the arrival of new pests, changes in water availability as glaciers melt, and geographical displacement of crops. Added to this, over 50 percent of the rural population of Latin America and the Caribbean are living below the poverty line, and nearly one-third of these are indigent (extremely poor), according to the Santiago-based Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC). "Farmers know about climate change because that is what agriculture is: dealing with the climate," said Laura Meza, coordinator of the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) Multi-disciplinary Team for South America on climate change and the environment. Encouraging dialogue between academia and small farmers is "a challenge our region still faces," she told IPS. "We have discovered that in "Here, they are in separate watertight compartments. We need a great deal more communication between them," Meza stressed. Adrian Rodriguez, officer in charge of the agricultural development unit within ECLAC's Division of Production, Productivity and Management, told IPS that communication between countries is also needed, "because we are facing a phenomenon that recognises no borders." "It's high time the ancestral knowledge possessed
by small farmers and indigenous people was appreciated at its true value,"
Rosa Guaman, a Quechua indigenous woman, told IPS. She belongs to the
Jambi Kiwa Association of Medicinal Plant Producers of Chimborazo, Ecuador,
a thriving cooperative business run by indigenous women who export herbs
to As an indigenous leader, and as a leader of the Association, Guaman had to overcome a great deal of prejudice to get her knowledge recognised and accepted, because she has no formal academic credentials, she said. "I don't think there's any surefire recipe"
for effective dialogue, Holm Tiessen, head of the intergovernmental
Inter-American Institute for Global Change Research, based in "What often happens is that science discovers solutions for problems that nobody has. Therefore, at some point during planning and seeking research funding, it is important to talk to people in the field. But there are no established mechanisms for doing this," he said. +
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