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    CropLife International
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    Opinion: Can a pro-innovation agrifood vision meet climate challenges?

    Putting agriculture at the heart of climate solutions speaks to lives and livelihoods. Governments can drive transformation by supporting scalable climate-smart agricultural technologies.

    By Emily Rees // 16 June 2025
    Technological innovations in agriculture, such as flood-tolerant crops, must be central to climate conversations, according to CropLife International’s Emily Rees. Photo by: Getty Images

    The United Nations’ June climate meetings, which began this week in Bonn — also known as SB 62 —  mark a pivotal point on the road to COP30, the 30th Conference of the Parties to the U.N. Framework Convention on Climate Change, hosted in Belém, Brazil, in November. In preparation, the COP30 Brazilian presidency recently laid out an ambitious and commendable letter reflecting the urgency and interconnected nature of the climate crisis, highlighting the three priorities it hopes will guide negotiations: reinforcing multilateralism, connecting climate action to people’s daily lives, and accelerating the implementation of the Paris Agreement. This laudable vision has received support from a range of sectors, including the plant science industry, to which CropLife belongs. But the vision is, of course, just the start of the journey.

    Through the creation of a special envoy for agriculture, the presidency has clearly recognized the critical role of the agriculture sector in the fight against climate change. Now, we have the momentum for bottom-up action, driven by real tools and real incentives.  

    Agriculture as a climate solution

    Agriculture sustains billions of livelihoods around the world. And, while it is acutely exposed to climate impacts — whether through seasonal irregularities, floods, droughts, or increasingly frequent and intense natural disasters —  it is also uniquely positioned to drive solutions that can make farming more climate-resilient and productive.

    From flood-tolerant seeds to precision irrigation and integrated pest management, governments can take a fundamental and game-changing step by supporting the development and scaling of climate-smart agricultural technologies that ultimately ensure food security, support livelihoods, and boost sustainable development.

    The SB 62 conversations can signal the path ahead. This is where we can take policy from talks to terrains — because fields don’t have roofs, and farmers don’t work in meeting rooms. In Bonn this week, leaders should look to take concrete steps to put agricultural technology and innovation at the core of climate solutions.

    Embrace systems-wide, outcome-based approaches

    Despite the undeniable scale of the challenge and the time frame before us, there’s much reason for optimism from a multilateral policy perspective — not least, the increasingly coherent drumbeat of the need for holistic approaches.

    The global stocktake and Global Goal on Adaptation, or GGA — two Paris Agreement concepts designed to accelerate progress on climate action — point in the same direction: the need for system-wide goal setting that links food security, sustainability, and economic empowerment. The Rio conventions on climate change, biodiversity, and desertification call for integrated, inclusive, and technology-enabled solutions.

    Soil health is one example where this thinking comes alive. Often overlooked, soils are essential to emission mitigation and food security: Healthy soils sequester billions of tons of carbon dioxide annually, regulate water flows, enhance biodiversity, and improve the nutritional value of crops.

    Improving soil health is not about any one input, but about managing outcomes across the whole system — through practices such as cover cropping, reduced tillage, and digital nutrient management. This is why policy frameworks that enable integrated, technology-neutral solutions are essential. Australia offers a clear example of this type of framework. Its National Soil Strategy, launched in 2021, prioritizes soil health through innovation, better data, and long-term investment — all tied to measurable outcomes. More importantly, soil health is embedded as a pillar within the Australian Agricultural Sustainability Framework, which links productivity, natural resource management, and environmental outcomes. This kind of integrated, outcome-driven approach shows how agricultural policy — starting with something as fundamental as soil — can drive sustainability, resilience, and growth. The challenge now is to scale this ambition globally — by enabling farmers everywhere to access the full range of climate-smart technologies and practices they need to thrive.

    Support innovation that works — especially for farmers

    Access to innovation can be the difference between success and failure for farmers confronting climate extremes. Crop-breeding technologies such as drought-tolerant maize have already shown significant benefits, reducing crop failure risk by 81% in parts of Nigeria, for example. Integrated pest management, which combines targeted pesticide use with biological controls, has also been shown to boost yields by over 40%, helping farmers stay productive even as pest pressures evolve with a warming climate.

    But access to these technologies and working practices is not guaranteed. Regulatory environments often lag behind the science, restricting the use of proven tools or limiting the choice for farmers. By setting the tone for COP30 to come, conversations at SB 62 can foster enabling conditions for technology and innovation by recognizing their contributions to climate action.

    Build the bridge between science and systems change

    The opportunities and solutions offered by science are clear, and the development of the necessary tools continues apace. What’s needed now is systems thinking to connect the dots between innovation, livelihoods, and policy. The upcoming discussions on the GGA and national adaptation plans, or NAPs — country-led strategies to identify and address medium- and long-term climate adaptation needs — offer the right platforms to embed this thinking.

    NAPs, in particular, can act as tools for countries to develop strategic road maps for governmental implementation and financing. By incorporating access to productivity-boosting, climate-resilient technologies, countries can equip farmers who are on the front line of climate change with the tools they need to respond to the impacts of the crisis.  

    But it’s not only governments that need to step up; business has a critical role to play, too. The real test of climate policy is not whether it makes headlines, but whether it delivers results — on farms, in markets, and across landscapes. Companies already training local agronomists, scaling digital tools, and strengthening resilient value chains are as essential to turning multilateral ambition into reality as the policy frameworks in which we operate.

    As the stakeholders in this journey gather in Bonn, here’s to vision, innovation, and outcomes-based thinking that truly delivers.

    For more information about CropLife International's ongoing efforts to support climate change adaptation, visit
    www.croplife.org.

    More reading:

    ► Opinion: Investing in agrifood systems is a safer bet than military spending

    ► Agrifood systems come with $11.6T in hidden costs driven by poor diets

    ► Can FAO's road map to transform agrifood systems meet its climate goals? (Pro)

    • Agriculture & Rural Development
    • Environment & Natural Resources
    • Innovation & ICT
    • Economic Development
    • CropLife International
    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 ( ).
    The views in this opinion piece do not necessarily reflect Devex's editorial views.

    About the author

    • Emily Rees

      Emily Rees

      Emily Rees is the president and CEO of CropLife International. Spearheading the association’s ambition to bring workable solutions to increase food security, tackle climate change, and protect biodiversity, Emily leads the organization in its regulatory and policy-driven dialogues. Through advancing science-based approaches to regulation and fair and equitable global trading rules, Emily helps bring together diverse partners with cutting-edge research and development to effect positive change. Emily joined CropLife International with an extensive pedigree in EU affairs and economic diplomacy. She held posts as a senior fellow at the European Centre for International Political Economy and as managing director of Trade Strategies.

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