The Challenges of Food Sovereignty’s Program by Global Climate Change in Tropical Ecosystem in Indonesia
Destruction of the earth and global climate change has now become a painful reality. Excessive exploitation of natural resources up to 1.7 times beyond the earth’s carrying capacity and contrary to nature-based development makes the dark future earth. Our earth, which is 4.5 billion years old, has b...
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id-ugm-repo.2832532023-11-22T03:57:09Z https://repository.ugm.ac.id/283253/ The Challenges of Food Sovereignty’s Program by Global Climate Change in Tropical Ecosystem in Indonesia Agus, Cahyono Nugraheni, Meilania Wuri, Margaretha Arnita Pertiwiningrum, Ambar Hasanah, Nur Aini Iswati Sugiyanto, Catur Nurjanto, Handojo Hadi Primananda, Enggal Sustainable Agricultural Development Agricultural Land Management Forestry Sciences Destruction of the earth and global climate change has now become a painful reality. Excessive exploitation of natural resources up to 1.7 times beyond the earth’s carrying capacity and contrary to nature-based development makes the dark future earth. Our earth, which is 4.5 billion years old, has been inhabited by around 7.3 billion people. The present and future population explosion require a giant leap to provide sufficient food to sustain life on earth. Lack of food, water, and energy supplies has triggered new widespread conflicts throughout the world. Located in tropical ecosystems, Indonesia is one of the megadiverse nations with the highest biological productivity in the world. However, these advantages are coming with a significant challenge. Having all of those natural potentials, Indonesia holds a crucial responsibility in global life cycle equilibration, not only in terms of environmental issues, such as climate change and biodiversity, but also a socio-economy-cultural issue. Therefore, balance management is needed to utilize the resources while preserving them for generations ahead wisely. Moreover, the challenge is even more significant with the COVID-19 pandemic, which hit the all-economy sector in the real world. In combination with the COVID-19 pandemic, global climate change could somehow obstruct the food sovereignty program that the Indonesian government has formulated. However, with solid food security and sovereignty system integrated from upstream to downstream, Indonesia could build a strong foundation for national food sovereignty. © 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG. Springer 2022 Book Section PeerReviewed Agus, Cahyono and Nugraheni, Meilania and Wuri, Margaretha Arnita and Pertiwiningrum, Ambar and Hasanah, Nur Aini Iswati and Sugiyanto, Catur and Nurjanto, Handojo Hadi and Primananda, Enggal (2022) The Challenges of Food Sovereignty’s Program by Global Climate Change in Tropical Ecosystem in Indonesia. In: Handbook of Climate Change Across the Food Supply Chain. Springer, 267 – 283. https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-87934-1_15 |
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Sustainable Agricultural Development Agricultural Land Management Forestry Sciences Agus, Cahyono Nugraheni, Meilania Wuri, Margaretha Arnita Pertiwiningrum, Ambar Hasanah, Nur Aini Iswati Sugiyanto, Catur Nurjanto, Handojo Hadi Primananda, Enggal The Challenges of Food Sovereignty’s Program by Global Climate Change in Tropical Ecosystem in Indonesia |
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Destruction of the earth and global climate change has now become a painful reality. Excessive exploitation of natural resources up to 1.7 times beyond the earth’s carrying capacity and contrary to nature-based development makes the dark future earth. Our earth, which is 4.5 billion years old, has been inhabited by around 7.3 billion people. The present and future population explosion require a giant leap to provide sufficient food to sustain life on earth. Lack of food, water, and energy supplies has triggered new widespread conflicts throughout the world. Located in tropical ecosystems, Indonesia is one of the megadiverse nations with the highest biological productivity in the world. However, these advantages are coming with a significant challenge. Having all of those natural potentials, Indonesia holds a crucial responsibility in global life cycle equilibration, not only in terms of environmental issues, such as climate change and biodiversity, but also a socio-economy-cultural issue. Therefore, balance management is needed to utilize the resources while preserving them for generations ahead wisely. Moreover, the challenge is even more significant with the COVID-19 pandemic, which hit the all-economy sector in the real world. In combination with the COVID-19 pandemic, global climate change could somehow obstruct the food sovereignty program that the Indonesian government has formulated. However, with solid food security and sovereignty system integrated from upstream to downstream, Indonesia could build a strong foundation for national food sovereignty. © 2022, The Author(s), under exclusive license to Springer Nature Switzerland AG. |
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Book Section PeerReviewed |
author |
Agus, Cahyono Nugraheni, Meilania Wuri, Margaretha Arnita Pertiwiningrum, Ambar Hasanah, Nur Aini Iswati Sugiyanto, Catur Nurjanto, Handojo Hadi Primananda, Enggal |
author_facet |
Agus, Cahyono Nugraheni, Meilania Wuri, Margaretha Arnita Pertiwiningrum, Ambar Hasanah, Nur Aini Iswati Sugiyanto, Catur Nurjanto, Handojo Hadi Primananda, Enggal |
author_sort |
Agus, Cahyono |
title |
The Challenges of Food Sovereignty’s Program by Global Climate Change in Tropical Ecosystem in Indonesia |
title_short |
The Challenges of Food Sovereignty’s Program by Global Climate Change in Tropical Ecosystem in Indonesia |
title_full |
The Challenges of Food Sovereignty’s Program by Global Climate Change in Tropical Ecosystem in Indonesia |
title_fullStr |
The Challenges of Food Sovereignty’s Program by Global Climate Change in Tropical Ecosystem in Indonesia |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Challenges of Food Sovereignty’s Program by Global Climate Change in Tropical Ecosystem in Indonesia |
title_sort |
challenges of food sovereignty’s program by global climate change in tropical ecosystem in indonesia |
publisher |
Springer |
publishDate |
2022 |
url |
https://repository.ugm.ac.id/283253/ https://link.springer.com/chapter/10.1007/978-3-030-87934-1_15 |
_version_ |
1783956412231057408 |