Back to Search Start Over

How can diverse national food and land-use priorities be reconciled with global sustainability targets? Lessons from the FABLE initiative

Authors :
Aline Mosnier
Guido Schmidt-Traub
Michael Obersteiner
Sarah Jones
Valeria Javalera-Rincon
Fabrice DeClerck
Marcus Thomson
Frank Sperling
Paula Harrison
Katya Pérez-Guzmán
Gordon Carlos McCord
Javier Navarro-Garcia
Raymundo Marcos-Martinez
Grace C. Wu
Jordan Poncet
Clara Douzal
Jan Steinhauser
Adrian Monjeau
Federico Frank
Heikki Lehtonen
Janne Rämö
Nicholas Leach
Charlotte E. Gonzalez-Abraham
Ranjan Kumar Ghosh
Chandan Jha
Vartika Singh
Zhaohai Bai
Xinpeng Jin
Lin Ma
Anton Strokov
Vladimir Potashnikov
Fernando Orduña-Cabrera
Rudolf Neubauer
Maria Diaz
Liviu Penescu
Efraín Antonio Domínguez
John Chavarro
Andres Pena
Shyam Basnet
Ingo Fetzer
Justin Baker
Hisham Zerriffi
René Reyes Gallardo
Brett Anthony Bryan
Michalis Hadjikakou
Hermann Lotze-Campen
Miodrag Stevanovic
Alison Smith
Wanderson Costa
A. H. F. Habiburrachman
Gito Immanuel
Odirilwe Selomane
Anne-Sophie Daloz
Robbie Andrew
Bob van Oort
Dative Imanirareba
Kiflu Gedefe Molla
Firew Bekele Woldeyes
Aline C. Soterroni
Marluce Scarabello
Fernando M. Ramos
Rizaldi Boer
Nurul Laksmi Winarni
Jatna Supriatna
Wai Sern Low
Andrew Chiah Howe Fan
François Xavier Naramabuye
Fidèle Niyitanga
Marcela Olguín
Alexander Popp
Livia Rasche
Charles Godfray
Jim W. Hall
Mike J. Grundy
Xiaoxi Wang
Source :
Sustainability Science. 18:335-345
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

There is an urgent need for countries to transition their national food and land-use systems toward food and nutritional security, climate stability, and environmental integrity. How can countries satisfy their demands while jointly delivering the required transformative change to achieve global sustainability targets? Here, we present a collaborative approach developed with the FABLE—Food, Agriculture, Biodiversity, Land, and Energy—Consortium to reconcile both global and national elements for developing national food and land-use system pathways. This approach includes three key features: (1) global targets, (2) country-driven multi-objective pathways, and (3) multiple iterations of pathway refinement informed by both national and international impacts. This approach strengthens policy coherence and highlights where greater national and international ambition is needed to achieve global goals (e.g., the SDGs). We discuss how this could be used to support future climate and biodiversity negotiations and what further developments would be needed.

Details

ISSN :
18624057 and 18624065
Volume :
18
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Sustainability Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0420cfad6c64f14e82b37c1f4eaa44f8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11625-022-01227-7