Posts tagged COP27 Blog Series
“Food COP”; agriculture and food systems finally have a platform at COP27

Nestled between rugged mountains surrounded by sprawling desert and the Red Sea, the Egyptian city of Sharm El Sheikh hosted over 45,000 people from across the globe for COP27. In its 27th year, the Conference of the Parties (COP) of the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) has finally acknowledged the role agriculture and food systems play in contributing to climate change but also leveraging them as tools for mitigating and adapting to climate change.

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Following Food Systems Discussion at COP 27

I had no frame of reference to anticipate what COP 27 would be like. The space, a maze of warehouses with hundreds of unique and buzzing pavilions, was hard enough to navigate. My attention was pulled in every direction by art, snatches of conversation, and the occasional famous face. I was thankful that to have been able to focus on one issue while I was there, sustainable food systems, but still found myself jogging between buildings to attend overlapping panels.

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COP27 Reflection

No matter how much information you have beforehand, I’m not sure it’s possible to entirely prepare for the experience of attending the COP. The scale of the event, with thousands of attendees, hundreds of events every day and seemingly infinite negotiations, is overwhelming, inspiring, and frustrating. It can feel like the many pavilions, side events and networking opportunities are a distraction from the real work of technical negotiations, to which many attendees aren’t even paying close attention.

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Reflections on nature-based solutions at COP27: innovation, policies, and partnerships  

Fletcher MGA student, Emily Dahl discusses her experience at COP27, where she focused on seeing what progress has been made since COP26 in Glasgow on nature-based solutions (NbS), and how governments, development banks, the private sector, NGOs, community-led groups, and others are translating commitments into action.

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