November 13, 2008 in Live Debates
Agriculture has to address a wide range of challenges, including feeding the planet’s growing population and providing raw materials for non-food industries while preserving the environment for future generations. But resource scarcity makes it difficult to find the right balance between these competing functions. Farming also has to make its own contribution to tackling climate change. The European Union is seeking to ensure that agriculture is sustainable by strengthening environmental conditionality, where public support for farming is dependent on meeting environmental criteria. The European Commission has launched a health-check of
the Common Agricultural Policy, which seeks to bring further improvements to recent reforms and to address the wide-ranging expectations of consumers, businesses and policymakers.
The conference ‘The new challenges of sustainable agriculture’ will address the most relevant questions for
farmers and policymakers:
• What place will energy crops have in Europe?
• Is environmental conditionality delivering the desired results?
• What contribution can agriculture make to combatting climate change?
Related Content:
Programme - Managing the atmosphere
Programme - Visions of Future Energy
Programme - Sustainability in a Changing World
Tags: Biofuels, Energy, Energy Security, Environment, Sustainable agriculture
September 1, 2008 in Progress towards Sustainability
Predicting the future of the planet is usually the domain of Hollywood science fiction movies. This month’s Comment Visions takes the debate over the future of planet out of the hands of screenwriters and into the realm of scientific fact by interviewing Didier Sornette, a French scientist who researches complex systems, modelling how they evolve and develop to predict the future.
Didier Sornette talks about how he thinks people will respond to these challenges, how the search for solutions will be forced upon humans by the scarcity of resources and the likely ways in which life on earth will look. By 2050 an increased population will encounter fuel and water shortages. Professor Sornette looks at three possible scenarios for the global response to these problems and predicts that future scientific research could create solutions we cannot yet imagine.
Discussion: Are the challenges posed by carbon emissions and diminishing fuel supplies in reality opportunities in disguise? Related Content:
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Tags: Business of Sustainability, COP15, Energy, Energy Security, Environment, Progress towards Sustainability, Society and Sustainability