(AGENPARL) - Roma, 7 Novembre 2025(AGENPARL) – Fri 07 November 2025 [NewsMedia_NewsRelease]
COP30: FAO warns climate funding gap threatens agrifood systems transformation
FAO Director-General conveys message at General Plenary Leaders Dialogue at Climate Summit in Brazil
07/11/2025
Belém, Brazil – Transforming global agrifood systems to be more efficient, inclusive, resilient, and sustainable is critical to meeting the Paris Agreement targets on climate change. Yet, the persistent shortfall in climate finance represents “a lost opportunity” for a sector that could cut global emissions by up to one-third.
This was the message delivered by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) on Friday at the Belém Climate summit.
Convened by Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva, the Summit brought together world leaders, ministers and representatives of international organizations to discuss solutions for tackling the climate crisis through fair and sustainable energy transitions, as well as forest and biodiversity conservation. The meeting was held ahead of the 2025 United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP30), scheduled for 10–21 November in Belém, Brazil.
At COP30, FAO will emphasize that science-based agrifood solutions can play a pivotal role in reducing emissions, enhancing carbon sequestration, restoring ecosystems, and strengthening resilience – all while ensuring food security and nutrition for the 1.2 billion people whose livelihoods depend on these systems.
“From restoration of degraded agricultural lands to resilient crops and sustainable aquaculture and livestock, we have the solutions that deliver across sectors,” said FAO Director-General QU Dongyu in a speech delivered on his behalf to the Summit’s General Plenary Leaders Dialogue meeting in Belém.
In Brazil’s Amazon region, for example, agroforestry projects are restoring degraded lands while supporting local communities – a triple win for biodiversity and food diversity, for food security, and for the climate.
But potential alone is not enough. Investment remains far below what is needed to deliver agrifood systems transformation at scale. Despite increased funding from the Green Climate Fund and the Global Environment Facility, forestry, livestock, fisheries, and crop production together received only 4 percent of total climate-related development finance in 2023.
“For a sector that can deliver a third of global emission reductions, this gap is not only unequal – it is a lost opportunity. By overlooking agrifood systems, we are leaving one of the most effective pathways to low-emission growth untapped,” Qu said.
Call to Action on Integrated Fire Management and Wildfire Resilience
On Thursday, the FAO Director-General addressed a COP30 thematic session on forests and oceans that marked the launch of the Call to Action on Integrated Fire Management and Wildfire Resilience, an initiative aimed at shifting from reactive fire suppression to proactive, preventive strategies through integrated fire management.
Spearheaded by Brazil and endorsed by 50 countries, along with FAO, the International Tropical Timber Organization (ITTO) and the UN Environment Programme (UNEP), the Call to Action urges governments to move beyond reactive fire suppression toward integrated fire management, emphasizing prevention and preparedness through a combination of scientific and traditional knowledge and modern technologies.
The framework includes 22 strategic actions to scale up wildfire prevention, empower local communities, and strengthen cross-border cooperation. It recognizes the FAO-hosted Global Fire Management Hub as a key delivery mechanism for the Call to Action in close coordination with countries and regional fire-management networks.
FAO at COP30
FAO sees COP30 as a critical moment to advance global efforts to address the impacts of the climate crisis while ensuring food security and nutrition for present and future generations. The Organization continues to work with countries and partners to ensure that agriculture and food security remain at the centre of negotiations, including discussions on the Global Goal on Adaptation, loss and damage, nationally determined contributions (NDCs) and National Adaptation Plans (NAPs), climate finance, technology and just transition.
FAO is also supporting the COP30 Presidency’s Action Agenda, including new initiatives on agriculture, forests, and bioeconomy. The Food and Agriculture for Sustainable Transformation (FAST) Partnership, hosted by FAO, will continue to serve as a COP-to-COP mechanism, ensuring agrifood systems remain central to COP dialogues and supporting Presidency initiatives in post-COP implementation. Through the FAST Partnership, FAO is supporting the Resilient Agriculture Investment for net Zero land degradation (RAIZ) accelerator, a global effort under the COP Presidency’s Action Agenda to unlock investments for the restoration of degraded agricultural land.
Building on the Call to Action on Integrated Fire Management and Wildfire Resilience, the FAO-hosted Global Fire Management Hub directly supports the COP30 Action Agenda objective on efforts to conserve, protect and restore ecosystems.
FAO is also co-hosting the Food and Agriculture Pavilion for the fourth consecutive year with CGIAR, promoting multistakeholder dialogue within and alongside the negotiations, and contributing to the Forest Pavilion in its role as Chair of the Collaborative Partnership on Forests.
Throughout the Conference, FAO will promote or launch a series of publications and policy briefs. These include an update on the interactions between agriculture, food systems, and climate change, an analysis of Global National Adaptation Plans (NAPs), a report on climate-related development finance to agrifood systems, as well as research on the climate benefits of forests and trees for agriculture, and on extreme heat and agriculture.
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FAO News and Media
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