Sponsored by the Nell Newman Foundation, the 11th Hour Project, GRACE Communications Foundation, and TomKat Foundation Co-sponsored by Animal Grantmakers and the Health and Environmental Funders Network (HEFN) Laboratory-created animal […]
FOCUS AREA: CLIMATE CHANGE
SAFSF uses focus areas to frame our policy, education, networking, and collaboration activities and offer multiple points of intersection for funders across our network.
The Issue
According to the Fourth National Climate Assessment, a federal inter-agency report published by the U.S. Global Change Research Program in 2018:
Rising temperatures, extreme heat, drought, wildfire on rangelands, and heavy downpours are expected to increasingly disrupt agricultural productivity in the United States. Expected increases in challenges to livestock health, declines in crop yields and quality, and changes in extreme events in the United States and abroad threaten rural livelihoods, sustainable food security, and price stability.
The report’s predictions refer primarily to commodity crop and industrial livestock production. It does note that Indigenous knowledge offers important insights and interventions that can inform climate resiliency plans, at the same time that livelihoods of rural communities and Indigenous and Tribal communities face unique and heightened risks from the effects of climate change.
The Connection of Climate to Agriculture, Food, and Fibers
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) reports that agriculture was responsible for about 11% of greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S. in 2021. Estimates that also include factors like fertilizer production, land use, and food waste put agriculture’s share of emissions even higher, at 20-25%. The longer conventional and extractive agriculture production methods dominate, and the longer policies that subsidize them remain in place, the higher this share could climb. Consider this animation from the Environmental Working Group showing current and expected U.S. emissions by economic sector. Emissions reductions in the transportation or residential sectors, without reductions from agriculture, food, and fiber systems, will not stave off the worse impacts of the climate crisis.
Expanding regenerative agriculture practices that originated in BIPOC communities, such as those that prioritize diversified agroecological systems, soil health, livestock grazing at non-industrial scales, etc., present a path forward for sequestering more carbon. Reducing fertilizer usage and curbing food waste are also key strategies to address major sources of agriculture emissions.
Climate and environmental funders should consider the current moment a call to action to harness the power of sustainable agriculture, food, and fiber systems as critical climate mitigation and adaptation strategies. Funding farmers, organizations, researchers, and grassroots advocates on the ground working to advance climate-smart practices, helping these groups access unprecedented federal conservation resources, and advocating for policy change in this sector is essential to ensuring a livable and equitable future.
Role of Philanthropy
Philanthropy has a key role to play in combatting climate change. Funders can support soil health and regeneration programs, diversified agroecological practices, and livestock grazing at non-industrial scales. These programs help create farms that are more resilient in the face of extreme weather events, and that contribute to the climate change solution by sequestering carbon and lowering methane and other harmful emissions. To connect with like-minded food and agriculture funders, become a SAFSF member.
More resources on Fiber-Agriculture-Climate Connections
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- Textile Exchange Regenerative Agriculture Landscape Analysis: This 2022 report makes the case for the connections between climate and agriculture for the fiber and textile industry, with a strong emphasis on the indigenous roots of regenerative agriculture and the need for equitable financing approaches to share the cost and risk of the transition to regenerative ag. View Textile Exchange’s Climate Vision.
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- Fibershed’s Climate BeneficialTM certification and related research: Fibershed’s program supports fiber farmers and ranchers in landscape-level stewardship that centers their work to build healthy soil.
SAFSF Featured Content
Dig Deeper
These resources are provided for information only; listing here does not imply an endorsement of any organization or its views by SAFSF.
- Climate Philanthropy Guide
- Climateworks Foundation
- Funding Climate Action: Pathways for Philanthropy
- Climate Change and Philanthropy: A Topic Brief for Donors
- Rural Climate Partnership
- Climate Change Impacts On Agriculture and Food Supply
- Tribal Climate and Conservation
- Federal Strategy to Advance Greenhouse Gas Emissions Measurement and Monitoring for the Agriculture and Forest Sectors
- US Agriculture and the Net Zero Challenge
- USDA Climate Solutions
- USDA Climate Hubs
Also see the multi-sector Funder Toolkit on Climate, Health and Equity, a project of eight philanthropy serving organizations including SAFSF.
Below is a listing of SAFSF programs and resources related to climate change.
Building a Local Foodshed | Site Visit at the 2018 SAFSF Forum
A thriving regional food system requires a number of sustainable and pro table components: farmers and producers, processing and distribution systems, and outlets to consumers and markets at the end. […]
Pathways to Impact through Grain Production | Site Visit at the 2018 SAFSF Forum
Washington State is ranked fifth among the nation’s top wheat-producing states. The majority of that grain is grown in the Palouse region of southeastern Washington, a 4,000 square mile area […]
The Science of Soil Health & Why It Matters
Co-sponsored by: Chesapeake Bay Funders Network and Sustainable Agriculture & Food Systems Funders Healthy soils are essential for healthy plant growth, but did you also know they play a role […]
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WebinarsOur Farm Bill: Leading a Conservation Strategy for the 21st Century
Co-sponsored by: McKnight Foundation, Sustainable Agriculture & Food Systems Funders and The Heinz Endowments The largest source of federal funding for conservation in the U.S is the Conservation Title of […]
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WebinarsFederal Budgets are in the Air: Briefing on Impact of 2019 Trump Budget on Food & Agriculture
Co-sponsored by the Farm to Fork Initiative and Sustainable Agriculture and Food Systems Funders. On Monday, the White House will release its 2019 budget proposal, which is expected to include […]