The Perspectives from the Global South team (ECHOES) at the Max Planck Institute of Geoanthropology has launched the Executive Report: Regenerative Agriculture and Resilient Food Systems during a series of activities at COP30. The report was written in collaboration with scholars from across the world. It synthesizes interdisciplinary research from the Global South, including Andean, African and Asian case studies, to show examples of regenerative agriculture and resilient food systems that are not only sustainable but often rooted in longstanding local and Indigenous knowledge systems. It highlights:
Although Parties were unable to agree on formal language that would anchor a fossil fuel phase-out as an outcome of COP 30, the launch of the RAIZ Accelerator (Resilient Agriculture Investment for Net-Zero Land Degradation) signaled a major commitment to restoring degraded farmland through public–private collaboration. Supported by ten countries - Brazil, Australia, Canada, Japan, New Zealand, Norway, Peru, Saudi Arabia, Uruguay and the United Kingdom - RAIZ aims to scale land restoration, map degraded areas, and derisk private investment with support from the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).
Positioned within COP30’s broader “implementation turn,” the ECHOES Regenerative Agriculture and Resilient Food Systems report invites policymakers, practitioners, financiers, and community leaders to draw on Global South evidence and translate global commitments into on-the-ground climate solutions.
Download the report:
https://gs-anthropocene.org/executive-report-regenerative-agriculture-and-resilient-food-systems/
Interviews & audiovisual materials from COP30: https://www.youtube.com/@ArchGlobalSouth