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Strengthening Food Energy Systems for Greater Food Security - GCP INT 237 GER










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    Renforcement des Systèmes Aliments-Energie Pour Une Plus Grande Sécurité Alimentaire 2018
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    Les systèmes aliments-énergie intégrés et durables pourront répondre de manière significative à l’énorme augmentation de la demande de nourriture, d’énergie et d’eau dans les années à venir. Par conséquent, il est nécessaire d’améliorer l’information et les capacités relatives à la manière de promouvoir un système intégré aliments-énergie (IFES) pour informer les décideurs et obtenir un soutien politique à cet effet. Le projet visait à évaluer la durabilité et la reproductibilité des systèmes intégrés aliments-énergie (IFES), en particulier pour des pays tels que le Ghana et le Mozambique, qui sont confrontés au défi de produire suffisamment d’aliments et d’énergie de manière non compétitive.
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    Lessons learned on the Sustainability and Replicability of Integrated Food-Energy Systems in Ghana and Mozambique
    PART 1: Main Findings
    2018
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    Given the global relevance of Integrated Food-Energy Systems (IFES), FAO has developed the IFES Analytical Framework; which gives guidance on how to select and assess indicators of IFES sustainability. The Analytical Framework (AF) includes a set of criteria, indicators and measures to help screen IFES projects. The first part of the AF screens IFES projects based on their environmental, social and economic sustainability. The second part of the AF contains a set of leading questions and related features that will help to analyse which factors make IFES replicable. In order to upscale sustainable biomass production, it is important to understand the drivers and the barriers that encourage or limit the long-term adoption of sustainable biomass production practices such as IFES. The question at stake is: Can an IFES that has been proven to be sustainable in one location or community, be taken up in other locations, by other communities, be it in the same region, country or even abroad? One needs to recognize that there are large differences between different IFES, on the one hand, and different geographical and cultural areas where the replication might take place, on the other. Yet we argue that there are some common denominators or features that lie within the project and that create an enabling environment for the uptake of a specific IFES project. These features need to be built into and adapted to the specific context of an IFES when replicated elsewhere.
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    Strengthening the Water-Food-Energy-Ecosystems (WFEE) Nexus - Safe Access to Fuel and Energy Briefing Note 2018
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    The multi-sectoral challenges of limited energy access in protracted crises include malnutrition, protection risks, gender-based violence, environmental degradation, unsustainable livelihoods, natural hazards and climate change. It is important to view these challenges not in isolation but in the broader frame of access to water, food, energy and ecosystem services. All four elements are crucial for human well-being and are intrinsically linked. A nexus approach will help to identify trade-offs and synergies, resulting in a more coordinated way of addressing these interlinked issues.

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