Open letter to World leaders and Parties to the Paris Agreement ahead of COP28

Climate adaptation within Africa’s livestock sector presents a unique opportunity to sustainably feed and support a quarter of the world’s population by 2050.

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For sub-Saharan Africa, livestock are a climate solution with legs

For millions of people across Africa, livestock are their lifeblood. Animals such as camels, cows, and donkeys, along with goats, sheep, and chickens represent food, livelihoods, draught power, fertiliser, fibre and a convertible source of income, especially if crops fail. Pastoralists rely on livestock to survive in areas where crops cannot grow, and Africa relies on pastoralists to produce half of its meat and milk, a daily glass of which helps children develop both physically and cognitively.

Livestock provide valuable agricultural resilience to climate extremes. The ability to move animals to find feed, water and shade means livestock de-risks crop farming while providing a safety net for failed harvests. Meanwhile, managed grazing and manure can help restore degraded land and support biodiversity. Livestock also boost the climate resilience of communities, making them less vulnerable in face of shocks, and better able to rebuild in the aftermath of disasters.

Because of this, livestock keeping in Africa should be seen as a credible climate solution – a solution with legs. Helping animals and herders to adapt to climate stresses and shocks can prevent critical food and economic losses and meet rising demand, while also supporting animal welfare and protecting the most vulnerable in the face of rising temperatures and unpredictable rains.

However, increasingly frequent and prolonged climate extremes are making it harder for livestock-keepers to adapt in time to sustain a growing population. More than 13 million livestock have died during the ongoing and unprecedented drought across the Horn of Africa. Thousands of animals have been killed during flooding in Niger, and new conditions are impacting the spread of livestock disease. It can take up to five years for farmers to recover from these losses if at all, according to UN reports.

We call on Parties at COP28 to urgently make the case for more climate finance to support adaptation for sustainable livestock systems in Africa. We urge high-income countries to meet their commitment to provide $100 billion per year in climate finance for developing countries. And we urge African countries to make the adaptation of livestock systems a core part of their climate strategies. As of last year, the continent received only 11 per cent of its total climate finance needs at just $30 billion, and less than one per cent of climate finance reached the livestock sector.

Adapting Africa’s livestock sector to a changing climate must be a priority at COP28 for the sustainable development of a continent that has contributed under three per cent of historic global greenhouse gas emissions. This includes developing more reliable forages and feed, more resilient breeds of indigenous livestock, more resilient animal health systems and support services, such as digital information tools, finance and index-based livestock insurance. Livestock should be included in national disaster risk reduction plans so that they are protected as important assets in the face of climate-related disasters.

Improving small-scale livestock resilience goes hand in hand with reducing emissions. Expanding simple, improved practices on smallholder farms and preventing livestock losses can reduce greenhouse emissions by up to 30 per cent, while boosting productivity, animal welfare, food security and incomes.

Climate adaptation within Africa’s livestock sector presents a unique opportunity to sustainably feed and support a quarter of the world’s population by 2050. In short, for Africa to feed itself, we need to invest in livestock. It is not only an economic issue but a form of climate justice. For many of Africa’s 800 million herders and smallholder farmers, a future without livestock is a future without life.

Signatories

  1. International Livestock Reserach Institute (ILRI), Appolinaire Djikeng, Director General
  2. PASTRES, Iain Scoones, Lead
  3. ILRI, Iain Wright, Deputy Director General – Integrated Sciences, (Individual endorsement)
  4. CIRAD, Serena Ferrari, Researcher (Individual endorsement)
  5. GOALSciences, Peer Ederer, Direktor
  6. Brooke, Chris Wainwright, Chief Executive
  7. Frederic Leroy, Professor (Individual endorsement)
  8. LPP, Ilse Köhler-Rollefson , Coordinator
  9. LIFE Network/LPP Africa, Jacob Wanyama, Coordinator
  10. Livestock for Social Good Foundation, Oloruntobi Olusegun, Executive Director
  11. Samsoft AG, Fritz Schneider , Consultant (Individual endorsement)
  12. Pastoral Integrated Farms, Adamu Abdullahi, Managing Director
  13. AKADEMIYA2063, Moumini Savadogo, Managing Director
  14. GALVmed, Carolin Schumacher, Chief Executive
  15. Animal Health Consultancy, Dieter Schillinger, Founder
  16. Viona Muleke Aluvale, Researcher (Individual endorsement)
  17. Global Forum for Sustainable Rural Development , Mohammed Abubakar , Co-founder & Head Africa
  18. Consortium for African Youth in Agriculture and Climate Change (CAYACC), Emmanuel Ngore, Facilitator
  19. SNV, Andre de Jager, Managing Director Sectors Agri-Food, Energy, Water (Individual endorsement)
  20. Action for Animal Health coalition, Dr. Laura Skippen, Chair
  21. ILRI, Nicoletta Buono, Scaling specialist (Individual endorsement)
  22. ILRI, Emily Ouma, Economist (Individual endorsement)
  23. University of Edinburgh, Nathaniel Jensen, Economist (Individual endorsement)
  24. Mercy Corps, Andrea Mottram, Senior Director, Food Security & Agricultural Systems (Individual endorsement)
  25. Mercy Corps, Katy Crosby, Senior Director, US Policy and Advocacy (Individual endorsement)
  26. IGAD Center for Pastoral Areas and Livestock Development, Dereje Wakjira, Director,
  27. ILRI and Borlaug Institute at Texas A&M University, Elsa Murano, Chair of the ILRI Board and Director of Borlaug Institute
  28. Eastern Africa Farmers Federation &e-Granary initiative, Stephen Muchiri, Chief Executive Officer
  29. International Institute of Tropical Agriculture , Simeon Ehui, Director General
  30. University of California – Davis, Frank Mitloehner, Professor (Individual endorsement)
  31. Oklahoma State University, Karl Rich, Director/Professor (Individual endorsement)
  32. Bluagrovet Services, Emmanuel Mosaku, CEO,
  33. HealthforAnimals (global animal health association), Carel du Marchie Sarvaas, Executive Director
  34. Land O’Lakes Venture37, John Ellenberger, Executive Director
  35. West-Africa platform for traditional pastoralists’ leaders (RUGGA), Boubakary  Barry, Executive Secretary
  36. Vétérinaires Sans Frontières Germany, Christian Griebenow, Managing Director
  37. Kenya Dairy Board, Margaret Rugut Kibogy, Managing Director
  38. Benjamin Abugri, Knowledge Management Specialist (Individual endorsement)
  39. Soil4Climate Inc., Seth J. Itzkan, Codirector,
  40. African Union Commission, H.E Amb. Josefa Leonel Correia Sacko, Commissioner for Agriculture, Rural Development, Blue Economy and Sustainable Environment
  41. Supporting Pastoralism and Agriculture in Recurrent and Protracted Crises (SPARC), Guy Jobbins, Executive Director
  42. ILRI, Alessandra Galie, Team Leader: Gender (Individual endorsement)
  43. American University of Beirut, Rami Zurayk, Professor, Food Security and Ecosystem Management (Individual endorsement)
  44. ILRI, Isabelle Baltenweck, Program leader (Individual endorsement)
  45. Vétérinaires Sans Frontières International, Margherita Gomarasca, Coordinator
  46. Gatsby Africa, Justin Highstead , Executive Director
  47. Harper Adams University, Jude Capper, Professor and ABP Chair of Sustainable Beef and Sheep Production (Individual endorsement)
  48. Veterinarians without Borders North America, Charmaine Brett, Executive Director
  49. Heifer International , Adesuwa Ifedi , Senior Vice President of Africa Programs
  50. The Roslin Institute, Bruce Whitelaw, Director
  51. SEBI-Livestock, Karen Smyth, Director

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