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UN Climate Talks: Endless Treadmill, Without The Health Benefits

UN Climate Talks: Endless Treadmill, Without The Health Benefits | The Glory of the Garden | Scoop.it
Global climate negotiations in Doha are nearing their conclusion and the talks are, as ever, beset by myriad divisions between rich nations and poor ones, between established economies and up-and-comers, and between, well, the United States and just about everyone else.

Among the agenda items still up in the air:-

... I asked Christoph Bals, the executive director of policy with the Bonn-based nonprofit trade and environment policy group Germanwatch, who is on the ground in Doha, whether the U.N. process had outlived its usefulness.

"The process has different weaknesses, but this is not the real problem," he said. "What is missing is the lack of political will of key players like U.S., China and partly the EU."

There's just one more day for that political will to be found.
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African agriculture: Dirt poor

African agriculture: Dirt poor | The Glory of the Garden | Scoop.it

The key to tackling hunger in Africa is enriching its soil. The big debate is about how to do it. ... African governments, international donors and scientists all agree that farmers must revitalize their soils. But there is passionate debate about how to do it. Many African governments and agricultural scientists argue that large doses of inorganic fertilizers are the most practical solution. But others, such the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) in Rome, are pushing for greener, cheaper solutions, such as no-till farming that conserves soil and 'fertilizer plants' that boost the soil's nitrogen content organically. Researchers report that these latter techniques are beginning to raise yields and improve soil fertility. But farmers are slow to adopt such practices, which require significantly more labour.


Via International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center
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