Tokyo strives to build resilience with city trees and healthy farmlands around it
- From
-
Published on
14.01.20
- Impact Area

By some accounts, Tokyo is the world’s largest city, with a population of 37 million. So, it seems surprising that its streets are lined with trees. Reverence for nature is a well-known part of Japanese culture. But trees lovingly wrapped against the cold and labeled in Japanese and Latin? It is not what you first expect from the country of Sony and Mitsubishi.
The reverence is undoubted. But Tokyo’s attention to trees is also rooted in existential concerns: the climate crisis, risk of disaster, water worry, and concern for the well-being of its people.
Related news
-
ICRISAT to Deliver World-Class Services as CGIAR’s Breeding Resources South Asia Hub
International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT)07.07.25-
Biodiversity
-
Food security
Strategic collaboration to scale innovation and deliver harmonized, high-quality support across CGIA…
Read more -
-
Multifunctional Landscapes that reconcile food production, with ecosystem restoration and biodiversity conservation
Multifunctional Landscapes Science Program06.07.25-
Biodiversity
-
Environmental health & biodiversity
The CGIAR Multifunctional Landscapes Science Program (MFL SP) is driven by a bold vision of…
Read more -
-
Mapping for Resilience: How Spatial Data is Transforming Karamoja Cluster
Ibukun Taiwo02.07.25-
Climate adaptation & mitigation
Pastoral communities in the Karamoja Cluster (a region spanning Kenya, Uganda, South Sudan, and Ethi…
Read more -