Agriculture “core area” for 2040 climate targets. The EU’s agricultural sector should be able to cut non-CO2 emissions by at least 30% by 2040 compared to 2015 levels, according to a leaked draft communication on the 2040 EU climate target to be presented next Tuesday (6 February). In the document, seen by Euractiv, livestock and fertiliser use are targeted as key areas for reducing greenhouse gas emissions. To achieve this, the text calls for scaling up the implementation on the ground of agricultural practices available at “relatively low cost”, such as producing “biomethane from manure, or optimising fertilisers application through precision farming”. EU agrees on new rules on ‘breakfast foods’. A deal on the so-called “breakfast directive” was reached on Tuesday (30 January) as the European Parliament and member states agreed to improve transparency on the origin of honey. Under the current EU rules, honey pots must show the exact origin if the product comes from one country, but things become confusing for blends of honey from different countries – labels either state, “blend of honey from EU and non-EU countries”, “blend of honey originating from the EU”, or “blend of honey not originating from the EU”. The agreement, to be soon rubber-stamped by the Parliament and the Council, establishes that the countries of origin must be indicated in the label, as well as the percentage for each of them. The directive also tackles sugar in fruit juices and jams. New categories of product have been created to raise the consumer’s awareness of the sugar content in juices, and the minimum fruit content required to market jams and marmalades has been increased. US support traditional African crops. The U.S. Special Envoy for food security Cary Fowler landed in Brussels to meet Belgian and EU officials and involve them in the Vision for Adapted Crops and Soils (VACS) initiative, involving the U.S. Department of State, FAO and African Union. The main mission is boosting the production of African traditional crops, such as fonio, sorghum, cassava and African locust bean. “We are highlighting the importance of traditional and indigenous crops in Africa and more than 300 indigenous crops in Africa,” Fowler said in a meeting with Brussels based journalists, adding they had “identified the crops that we think have the most potential for adding nutrition to the diet in Africa”. In the past, he added, “we have called them orphan crops, neglected crops, minor crops, under-utilised crops, we’ve had a lot of names for them, most of which have sort of negative covenant connotations. So we’re [now] calling them opportunity crops”. Asked if the U.S. would push for specific technologies to improve the traditional varieties, Fowler replied: “We [will not be] the gatekeeper and the dictator of what other countries and organisations are going to do. But I would have to say that looking at these crops, I just don’t see the likelihood of going to GMO route”. “I think, Fowler concluded, that many of these crops will be improved varieties, probably through traditional plant breeding methods and would be distributed through a variety of ways seed systems” that “in Africa are diverse”. [Edited by Zoran Radosavljevic] |