CGIAR Future Contributions and Climate Change Classification

This document encompasses the Investment Prospectus for the 32 initiatives planned for 2022-2024, categorized based on their relationship with climate change approaches. Methodology: We conducted a comprehensive review of 32 CGIAR initiatives explicitly designed to yield a tangible and enduring p...

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Autores principales: Esponda Bernal, Maria Del Mar, Amahnui, George Amenchwi, Andrade López, Robert Santiago
Formato: Conjunto de datos
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: 2024
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139236
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author Esponda Bernal, Maria Del Mar
Amahnui, George Amenchwi
Andrade López, Robert Santiago
author_browse Amahnui, George Amenchwi
Andrade López, Robert Santiago
Esponda Bernal, Maria Del Mar
author_facet Esponda Bernal, Maria Del Mar
Amahnui, George Amenchwi
Andrade López, Robert Santiago
author_sort Esponda Bernal, Maria Del Mar
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description This document encompasses the Investment Prospectus for the 32 initiatives planned for 2022-2024, categorized based on their relationship with climate change approaches. Methodology: We conducted a comprehensive review of 32 CGIAR initiatives explicitly designed to yield a tangible and enduring positive impact across five crucial areas, with a particular focus on climate change mitigation and adaptation. Through extensive debates and rounds of discussions, we categorized the initiatives into mitigation, adaptation, or both, specifying whether their relationship was direct or indirect. Mitigation, as defined by the IPCC, encompasses human interventions to reduce sources or enhance sinks of GHGs. Similarly, adaptation, according to the IPCC, refers to the process of adjusting to current or anticipated climate conditions and their effects. In human systems, adaptation aims to moderate or avoid harm and exploit beneficial opportunities arising from climate change. In simpler terms, when discussing a direct relationship in innovation, it implies that the project has the potential to positively impact greenhouse gas emissions or climate change effects as it unfolds. Conversely, when referring to an indirect relationship, it means that the innovation does not have an immediate impact but can serve as a tool later to support the implementation of a direct project or initiative that does have a direct impact on emissions or climate effects (2024-01)
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spelling CGSpace1392362024-04-25T06:01:25Z CGIAR Future Contributions and Climate Change Classification Esponda Bernal, Maria Del Mar Amahnui, George Amenchwi Andrade López, Robert Santiago initiatives adaptation mitigation impact This document encompasses the Investment Prospectus for the 32 initiatives planned for 2022-2024, categorized based on their relationship with climate change approaches. Methodology: We conducted a comprehensive review of 32 CGIAR initiatives explicitly designed to yield a tangible and enduring positive impact across five crucial areas, with a particular focus on climate change mitigation and adaptation. Through extensive debates and rounds of discussions, we categorized the initiatives into mitigation, adaptation, or both, specifying whether their relationship was direct or indirect. Mitigation, as defined by the IPCC, encompasses human interventions to reduce sources or enhance sinks of GHGs. Similarly, adaptation, according to the IPCC, refers to the process of adjusting to current or anticipated climate conditions and their effects. In human systems, adaptation aims to moderate or avoid harm and exploit beneficial opportunities arising from climate change. In simpler terms, when discussing a direct relationship in innovation, it implies that the project has the potential to positively impact greenhouse gas emissions or climate change effects as it unfolds. Conversely, when referring to an indirect relationship, it means that the innovation does not have an immediate impact but can serve as a tool later to support the implementation of a direct project or initiative that does have a direct impact on emissions or climate effects (2024-01) 2024-01 2024-02-12T13:56:37Z 2024-02-12T13:56:37Z Dataset https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139236 en Open Access Esponda Bernal, M.D.M.; Amahnui, G.A.; Andrade Lopez, R.S. (2024) CGIAR Future Contributions and Climate Change Classification. https://doi.org/10.7910/DVN/BVC46H
spellingShingle initiatives
adaptation
mitigation
impact
Esponda Bernal, Maria Del Mar
Amahnui, George Amenchwi
Andrade López, Robert Santiago
CGIAR Future Contributions and Climate Change Classification
title CGIAR Future Contributions and Climate Change Classification
title_full CGIAR Future Contributions and Climate Change Classification
title_fullStr CGIAR Future Contributions and Climate Change Classification
title_full_unstemmed CGIAR Future Contributions and Climate Change Classification
title_short CGIAR Future Contributions and Climate Change Classification
title_sort cgiar future contributions and climate change classification
topic initiatives
adaptation
mitigation
impact
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/139236
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