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    • Food Systems

    A US-led initiative to climate-proof crops heads to Central America

    The Vision for Adapted Crops and Soils will soon hit Latin America, where it hopes to drive research into resilient seed varieties native to the region.

    By Elissa Miolene // 05 June 2024

    A U.S.-backed initiative to build climate-resilient food systems in Africa is now expanding to Central America, bringing a focus on indigenous crops — and healthier soils — to Guatemala.

    The announcement comes more than a year after the Vision for Adapted Crops and Soils, or VACS, was first rolled out by the U.S. Department of State. Since then, according to Anna Nelson, the State Department’s deputy special envoy for global food security, the $150 million initiative has analyzed some 60 indigenous crops that have the potential to withstand climate shocks. It has also mobilized African countries, organizations, and the private sector to embrace a similar approach.

    Now, Guatemala will be the first country touched by VACS in the Western Hemisphere. The nation’s minister of agriculture hopes the initiative will increase agricultural productivity and drive down malnutrition — especially for the country’s poorest.

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    • Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture (IICA)
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    About the author

    • Elissa Miolene

      Elissa Miolene

      Elissa Miolene reports on USAID and the U.S. government at Devex. She previously covered education at The San Jose Mercury News, and has written for outlets like The Wall Street Journal, San Francisco Chronicle, Washingtonian magazine, among others. Before shifting to journalism, Elissa led communications for humanitarian agencies in the United States, East Africa, and South Asia.

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