• News
    • Latest news
    • News search
    • Health
    • Finance
    • Food
    • Career news
    • Content series
    • Try Devex Pro
  • Jobs
    • Job search
    • Post a job
    • Employer search
    • CV Writing
    • Upcoming career events
    • Try Career Account
  • Funding
    • Funding search
    • Funding news
  • Talent
    • Candidate search
    • Devex Talent Solutions
  • Events
    • Upcoming and past events
    • Partner on an event
  • Post a job
  • About
      • About us
      • Membership
      • Newsletters
      • Advertising partnerships
      • Devex Talent Solutions
      • Contact us
Join DevexSign in
Join DevexSign in

News

  • Latest news
  • News search
  • Health
  • Finance
  • Food
  • Career news
  • Content series
  • Try Devex Pro

Jobs

  • Job search
  • Post a job
  • Employer search
  • CV Writing
  • Upcoming career events
  • Try Career Account

Funding

  • Funding search
  • Funding news

Talent

  • Candidate search
  • Devex Talent Solutions

Events

  • Upcoming and past events
  • Partner on an event
Post a job

About

  • About us
  • Membership
  • Newsletters
  • Advertising partnerships
  • Devex Talent Solutions
  • Contact us
  • My Devex
  • Update my profile % complete
  • Account & privacy settings
  • My saved jobs
  • Manage newsletters
  • Support
  • Sign out
Latest newsNews searchHealthFinanceFoodCareer newsContent seriesTry Devex Pro
    • News
    • Devex Dish

    Devex Dish: How farmers in climate-vulnerable Honduras are coping

    In this week's edition: Farmers in Honduras struggle with weather unpredictability, the climate organization designed to fail, and the U.S. nomination for WFP chief.

    By Teresa Welsh // 16 November 2022
    Sign up for Devex Dish today.

    When I was in Honduras last month, I was struck by the severity of the situation faced by farmers and a food-insecure population versus the international attention they get. Pitting hungry people against each other is not productive, but we rarely hear about the situation in Central America — except in the context of migration.

    That’s why I was so eager to talk to farmers in one of the world’s most climate-vulnerable countries about how changing weather patterns have affected their yields and household food security.

    This is a preview of Devex Dish

    Sign up to this newsletter to get the inside track on how agriculture, nutrition, sustainability, and more are intersecting to remake the global food system in this weekly newsletter.

    I met farmer after farmer who told me unpredictability has become the norm in every growing season, making it nearly impossible to predict what kind of harvest to expect or to have a contingency plan for poor conditions. Sometimes they get too much rain. Sometimes they get too little. But without a doubt, climate change is wreaking havoc on smallholders.

    “We don’t have any control,” Amílcar Antonio Zúñiga, 35, who grows corn, tomatoes, and coffee in the community of El Jícaro in the southern municipality of Oropolí, told me. His fields flooded in September, but now it’s too dry, and his crops are suffering. “We never know how the rainy season will go.”

    Unpredictable weather affects farmers all over Honduras, from those who harvest staples such as corn and beans for household consumption to those like Zúñiga, who export tomatoes to neighboring El Salvador, and even the niche farmers exporting coffee to the international market.

    With a government largely unequipped to provide meaningful support, international organizations are stepping in to teach climate-adaptive agricultural practices to help Honduran farmers build resilience and ensure their long-term livelihoods.

    Visual story: Honduran farmers at the mercy of climate change-induced drought, floods

    I had the opportunity to try out my beekeeping skills in Honduras.

    Less COP all the time

    We’re going a little lighter on the 27th United Nations Climate Change Conference content this week. I’ll bring you a wrap-up of all the announcements made in next week’s edition, but I want to be sure you see my colleague Rumbi Chakamba’s exclusive: Some countries in the Group of 77 and China have opposed the inclusion of a food-systems approach to a major agricultural pact being negotiated at the conference.

    Those countries, the main group of low- and middle-income countries at the U.N., put the ongoing Koronivia Joint Work on Agriculture in danger of being postponed until June — a delay the food system can’t afford, advocates say. João Campari, global leader of food practice at the World Wildlife Fund, tells Rumbi it would be a “major failing” if countries can’t agree that food systems should have a seat at the table in negotiations on agriculture.

    Read: Some G77 countries oppose widening climate agriculture pact

    I also want to make sure you see my interview with the founder of Clim-Eat, Dhanush Dinesh. After years of frustration in legacy food systems institutions, he set out to create an organization “designed for failure” and was willing to take big risks to spur climate action in food systems. His fledgling organization — it’s 1 year old — is already turning down funding, and Dinesh doesn’t want it to exceed $2 million per year.

    “What we want to do is we want to take those big risks which established organizations are not willing to take, and if we fail, that’s fine. But something needs to change in the system,” Dinesh tells me.

    Read: Meet the food and climate organization 'designed for failure'

    Crossing the aisle

    The U.S. has formally recommended two candidates to succeed David Beasley as executive director of the World Food Programme: Ambassador Cindy McCain and David Lane, former ambassador to the U.S. food agencies under former President Barack Obama.

    My colleague Colum Lynch reports in this scoop that McCain, who is currently the U.S. ambassador to the Rome-based U.N. food agencies, is heavily favored by the Biden administration.

    Your next job?

    Bringing home the bacon

    Senior Program Specialist
    International Development Research Centre (IDRC)
    Dakar, Senegal | CA$101,006 - 129,729 (Annual gross)

    See more jobs →

    An American has headed the humanitarian organization for 30 years, but the role is technically selected by the U.N. secretary-general and the head of the Food and Agriculture Organization. Current head Beasley, a Republican appointee whose term was extended by a year due to the food crisis, will step down in April. McCain is the wife of former Republican Senator John McCain and has broad appeal in the U.S. Congress, which approves U.S. funding to WFP.

    Exclusive: US proposes Cindy McCain to lead the World Food Programme

    Verify this

    Longtime Dish readers may recall our slight obsession with the Beasley/Elon Musk Twitter spat over funding to end global hunger last year. Beasley was essentially begging Musk on social media to put $6 billion of his fortune to good use to help the agency end hunger. Spoiler alert: It didn’t work out for Beasley.

    Now, WFP has dived into the Musk-Twitter blue checkmark-verification drama by launching a fundraising campaign poking fun at Musk’s plan to charge $8 a month for the blue checkmark that’s supposed to verify Twitter users are who they say they are. They urge people to “become a verified humanitarian” by donating money to the agency — with all the amounts listed on the donation page in multiples of eight.

    Via LinkedIn.

    ICYMI: Climate change is pushing the humanitarian system to the brink, WFP’s director of climate and disaster risk reduction said last week at Devex’s COP 27 event. 

    Farmers are fundamental

    Leaders at COP 27 in Egypt must prioritize support for smallholder farmers — like those I spoke to in Honduras — who are hit hardest by climate change, write CGIAR Executive Managing Director Claudia Sadoff and FAO Deputy Director-General Maria Helena Semedo in this op-ed for Devex. They call for a common global framework to protect communities experiencing the worst, financing for vulnerable sectors such as agriculture, and real delivery on implementation.

    Opinion: If COP 27 ignores farmers, global food security will suffer

    Speaking of financing, Devex Pro members can check out my colleague Sara Jerving’s piece on how the Green Climate Fund — which works on global food security — seeks to unlock private capital to meet the massive climate demands.

    Read: The Green Climate Fund strives for a more catalytic role (Pro)

    + Pro members also have exclusive access to our event on Nov. 22, which will lay out all you need to know after COP 27 wraps up. Register here for the conversation with Rumbi and a panel of experts.

    Chew on this

    U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres is “hopeful” the Black Sea Grain Initiative will be renewed. [Voice of America]

    The Global Food and Nutrition Security Dashboard launched by the World Bank and Germany “will be the single biggest concentration of data on food and nutrition security.” [Devex]

    The global food import bill is estimated to be higher than previously expected, hitting $1.94 trillion in 2022, a new record. [FAO]

    • Agriculture & Rural Development
    • Environment & Natural Resources
    • Humanitarian Aid
    • World Food Programme (WFP)
    • World Wildlife Fund
    Printing articles to share with others is a breach of our terms and conditions and copyright policy. Please use the sharing options on the left side of the article. Devex Pro members may share up to 10 articles per month using the Pro share tool ( ).

    About the author

    • Teresa Welsh

      Teresa Welshtmawelsh

      Teresa Welsh is a Senior Reporter at Devex. She has reported from more than 10 countries and is currently based in Washington, D.C. Her coverage focuses on Latin America; U.S. foreign assistance policy; fragile states; food systems and nutrition; and refugees and migration. Prior to joining Devex, Teresa worked at McClatchy's Washington Bureau and covered foreign affairs for U.S. News and World Report. She was a reporter in Colombia, where she previously lived teaching English. Teresa earned bachelor of arts degrees in journalism and Latin American studies from the University of Wisconsin.

    Search for articles

    Related Stories

    Devex DishDevex Dish: World Food Programme cuts come at worst possible time

    Devex Dish: World Food Programme cuts come at worst possible time

    Devex DishDevex Dish: WFP faces impossible decisions with US funding in doubt

    Devex Dish: WFP faces impossible decisions with US funding in doubt

    Devex DishDevex Dish: How WFP delivers food in Sudan amid war and aid cuts

    Devex Dish: How WFP delivers food in Sudan amid war and aid cuts

    Devex DishDevex Dish: How the seed sector can step up for food security

    Devex Dish: How the seed sector can step up for food security

    Most Read

    • 1
      Laid-off USAID workers struggle to find work as new job cuts approach
    • 2
      Philanthropic initiative launches long-term fund to replace USAID stopgap
    • 3
      Opinion: Women’s voices reveal a maternal medicines access gap
    • 4
      Opinion: Resilient Futures — a world where young people can thrive
    • 5
      Breaking the cycle: Why anemia needs a place on the NCD agenda
    • News
    • Jobs
    • Funding
    • Talent
    • Events

    Devex is the media platform for the global development community.

    A social enterprise, we connect and inform over 1.3 million development, health, humanitarian, and sustainability professionals through news, business intelligence, and funding & career opportunities so you can do more good for more people. We invite you to join us.

    • About us
    • Membership
    • Newsletters
    • Advertising partnerships
    • Devex Talent Solutions
    • Post a job
    • Careers at Devex
    • Contact us
    © Copyright 2000 - 2025 Devex|User Agreement|Privacy Statement