(MENAFN- Trend News Agency)
BAKU, Azerbaijan, November 13. A roundtable on
the topic "Land Degradation and Climate Change: Losses, Damages,
and Opportunities for Strengthening Cooperation among Countries of
Central Asia, the Caucasus, and Regions with Arid Climate" has
taken place within the 29th session of the conference of the
Parties to the United Nations Framework convention on Climate
Change (COP29), Trend reports via the Azerbaijani Ministry of
Aggriculture.
According to the ministry, the event, held in the COP29 Blue
Zone, gathered Azerbaijan's Minister of Agriculture Majnun
Mammadov, Uzbekistan's Minister of Ecology, Environmental
Protection, and Climate Change Aziz Abdukhakimov, leaders of
relevant structures from both countries, representatives of
international organizations, and experts.
Opening the event with introductory remarks, Abdukhakimov
highlighted that, as with other parts of the world, the regions of
Central Asia and the Caucasus are facing the challenges of rapid
climate change and soil degradation.
He said that increased frequency and intensity of droughts,
desertification, and other extreme climate events are intensifying
threats to agriculture, water resources, and biodiversity.
In light of current challenges, minimizing the impacts of climate
change and enhancing cooperation among countries at regional and
global levels for sustainable development have become essential,
added the official.
Mammadov emphasized that the degradation of about 40 percent of
the world's land resources poses a threat to ecosystems, food
security, and water resources, representing a global crisis.
According to him, in recent decades, unsustainable agricultural
practices worldwide, deforestation, urban expansion, and the
growing impacts of climate change have accelerated land
degradation.
He stressed that achieving sustainable development amid modern
challenges requires collaboration in digital transformation of
agriculture, technology transfer in this field, and sharing of best
practices.
The minister also said that to mitigate the negative impact of
climate change on agriculture and make more effective use of
available land and water resources, modern technologies are being
increasingly utilized, and the development of climate-friendly
agricultural systems is being supported.
Government assistance in the form of concessions and loans is
provided to farmers engaged in activities such as implementing
modern irrigation systems, preventing land degradation, and
enhancing soil fertility, Mammadov explained.
At the event, World Bank Vice President for Europe and Central
Asia Antonella Bassani, representatives from Kazakhstan, Belarus,
and other countries discussed issues of identifying major risks and
threats to agriculture and water resources, the current situation
with land degradation and climate change, the rational use of land
and water resources in the face of modern challenges, the adoption
of resource-saving approaches, environmental improvements,
preservation and development of sustainable agricultural
traditions, and regional cooperation in developing adaptive
strategies that account for local climate and economic
conditions.
The event also featured a screening of footage on measures taken
in the Aral Sea Basin region to address the environmental disaster
and combat soil degradation.
To note, the 29th session of the Conference of the Parties to
the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (COP29)
started in Baku on November 11. The United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change is an agreement signed at the Earth
Summit in Rio de Janeiro in June 1992 to prevent dangerous human
interference in the climate system.
The acronym COP (Conference of Parties) stands for“Conference
of Parties” and is the highest legislative body overseeing the
implementation of the Framework Convention on Climate Change.
A total of 198 countries are parties to the Convention. Unless
the parties decide otherwise, the COP is held annually. The first
COP event took place in March 1995 in Berlin, and its secretariat
is located in Bonn.
The main expectation from COP29 is to agree on a fair and
ambitious New Collective Quantitative Goal (NCQG) on climate
finance. The COP29 chairmanship has launched 14 initiatives that
include linkages between climate action and the Sustainable
Development Goals, including green energy corridors, green energy
storage, harmony for climate resilience, clean hydrogen, methane
reduction in organic waste, action on green digital technologies,
and other topics.
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