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Dr. Sandra Piesik

Dr Sandra Piesik is an award-winning architect, author and researcher specialising in the implementation of global sustainable legislation, nature-based solutions and traditional knowledge adaptation. She is the founder of 3 ideas B.V. Amsterdam based consultancy, a Visiting Professor at the UCL Global Institute for Prosperity, former Policy Support Consultant on Rural – Urban Dynamics to UNCCD and a contributor to the UN-HABITAT “Urban-Rural Linkages: Guiding Principles and Framework for Action to Advance Integrated Territorial Development”.

Dr Piesik is a stakeholder and network member of several UN organisations including UNFCCC: The Resilience Frontiers, the Nairobi Work Programme (NWP), the Paris Committee on Capacity Building (PCCB) and Climate and Technology Centre & Network (CTCN).

Her published work includes Arish: Palm-Leaf Architecture (published by: Thames & Hudson in 2012), she is also the general editor of the encyclopaedia, HABITAT: Vernacular Architecture for a Changing Planet (published by: Thames & Hudson, Abrams Books, Flammarion, Editions Detail and Blume in 2017).  

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Dr. Kusum Lata

Kusum Lata is a professional in the field of climate change working on policies, strategies, capacity building. Presently, she is a well-known expert on economic diversification and just transition of the workforce while she leads the support to international negotiations on the impact of the mitigation policies. She has written technical papers for international negotiations, research papers in reputed journals and chapters in books in the area of her progressive career. She spent the first fifteen years of her career working in India on developing technology for bio-methanation (waste to energy) and biomass gasification and shares two patents through her research.  She completed her doctorate in the field of waste to energy and published many research papers in reputed journals for her doctoral degree research work. Later, she also established herself as qualified technical lead assessor and undertook more than fifty audits in the duration of five years with UNFCCC for accrediting organizations for validating and verifying carbon emission reduction projects. She enjoys working on projects which directly impact the life of people especially in developing countries, which inspired her to work over six months in Togo, Africa to support development and implementation of projects like efficient cook stoves, waste management etc.

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Mr. Christoph Schwarte

Christoph Schwarte is a qualified German lawyer with over 20 years of practical experience in different arenas of international environmental law. He is the executive director of Legal Response International (LRI) - a London based charity that provides free legal support to developing countries and civil society observer organisations in connection with the international climate negotiations. Christoph was a member of the International Law Association’s Committee that developed legal principles related to climate change (adopted in 2014) and has been actively involved in the international climate negotiation for many years. He has co-authored a guide book on the Paris Agreement and regularly advises on climate law. Previously, Christoph served with the International Tribunal for the Law of the Sea (ITLOS) as an Associate Officer (P-2) and worked at the Foundation for International Environmental Law and Development (FIELD).

Independent Dialogue: Participatory and Inclusive Climate Risk Management for Resilient and Climate-friendly Food Systems

June 3rd 2021
04:30 - 06:30 pm IST
Virtual Event

Independent Dialogue: Participatory and Inclusive Climate Risk Management for Resilient and Climate-friendly Food Systems

June 3rd 2021
04:30 - 06:30 pm IST
Virtual Event

Introduction

Food systems around the globe are vulnerable to the impacts of climate change, which are set to become more frequent and intense over the coming decades. Crop cultivation, livestock, fisheries and aquaculture, as well as related sectors such as forestry are heavily affected by changes in weather patterns, extreme weather events, and slow-onset processes such as sea level rise, soil degradation, and loss of ecosystem services.

Objectives

  • Facilitate a discussion on solutions to be introduced under Action Track 5, in particular to the workstreams on environmental, social, and economic resilience and cross-cutting solutions.

  • Build on the experiences and expertise of stakeholders working on the topic to gain further input on the roles of different stakeholders and multi-actor partnerships including government, the private sector, civil society, and local communities.

  • Build on the technical capacity of key stakeholders working on the topic of climate risk management, climate risk transfer, and climate insurance.

  • Identify and explore entry points for integrating context-specific and holistic risk management approaches into national and international policies, plans, and processes and existing infrastructure.Integration of resilience-building among youth and women and the inclusion of gender and youth empowerment in planning and policy processes.

  • Discuss implications of climate-related human mobility for food systems and connect to just recovery from COVID-19, and resilience-building in food systems through just transition.

  • Share knowledge, experiences, best practices, and lessons learned.

  • Just transition in the energy sector
    - Key elements to ensure just transition in the energy sector
    - Gaps and challenges faced in integrating aspects and strategies of just transition in the energy sector
    - Institutional structures and role of actors in achieving just transition in the energy sector
    - Entry points and opportunities for integrating just transition into climate policy initiatives and actions
    - Success stories, best practices, and experience sharing on initiatives

  • Ensuring just transition in the food sector
    - Key elements of just transition and their relation to global and local food systems
    - Gaps and challenges faced in integrating aspects and strategies of just transition in the food sector
    - Institutional structures and role of actors in achieving just transition in the food sector
    - Entry points and opportunities for integrating just transition into climate policy initiatives and actions
    - Success stories, best practices, and experience sharing on initiatives

  • Gender, inclusion, social protection, and cross-cutting aspects related to just transition
    - Key cross-cutting aspects related to just transition
    - Interlinks for integration of just transition with climate action and into different climate policy and action processes
    - Impacts of COVID-19 and the role of recovery actions in contributing toward just transition
    - Success stories, best practices, and experience sharing on initiatives

Convener

Ms. Senashia Ekanayake

SLYCAN Trust

Curator

Ms. Vositha Wijenayake

SLYCAN Trust

Speakers and Facilitators

Prof. Saleemul Huq

International Centre for Climate Change and Development

Lesley Ndlovu

African Risk Capacity Ltd.

Duncan Williamson

Nourishing Food Systems

Daniel Stadtmüller

InsuResilience Global Partnership

Ruwani de Silva

Global Youth Forum on Climate Change

Dennis Mombauer

SLYCAN Trust