 Ond y bydd y gweithfeydd y gweithio gwaholeg arlaen cael eu cyfraith yma y mae gennymio cimd-oedd, gyda bod phobl yn gweithio ar gweithfa honno fel ffaraes wedi gwneudol fel amddangos ei gwaith ar fy ymddydd. Ond mae gennymio cimd-oedd ar gweithfa hynny ym ddefnyddio cydnodd mawr, y ddefnyddio ar gyfnodd agroaiddio, gweithfeyddio'r ffaithwyr yw carbon sig. the need to feed 9 billion people and achieve food security and the need to take carbon out of the atmosphere through agricultural and land use as well as just forestry means that all of this has to be managed in the same landscape. And I think what's really important to us here in Warsaw is to see the forestry community, and the agriculture community coming together at the policy level, not just at the local level. Rwy'n chael cael ei plyddio'n dda ni'n meddwl gan y dy soluを rym ni, ac rwy'n meddwl yn mindsigol i'r cyfnodau ganweithio. Mae'n gweithio'n gweld i'r ddeumel, rwy'n gweithio'r ddeumel o'r amlwg chipolad ar gael gynfrannu, dwi'n gweithio'r ddeumel o'u gynfrannu, dwi'n gweithio'r ddeumel o'u gwybod, ac rwy'n gweithio'r ddechrau'n ddechrau'u gwybod beidio'r ei fod. Mae'r cyfnodd yn cyfnodd i'w bod hynny'r symud o ysgolion. Ym ddweud y peolwyr syniad yma yn yr UNFCCC, yn Warsaw, yn ddim ar gyfer yr ymgyrchu syniad yma. Felly mae'r cyfnodd yw'r cyfnodd yn dweud yma, ac mae'n byw ychydig o'r cyfnodd, amgyrchu i'r cyfnodd, ac ymgyrchu'r symud o'r cyfnodd. Mae'n gweithio datblygu'n gweithio. � I think they understand that agriculture has an important role to play in adaptation. 著 I think the profit grandson has an important role to play in adaptation. 著 I think they have not really embraced the triple wind. This is something that is extremely disappointing. I think that it is in some ways outrageous that we haven't made the progress that we should have made in the work programme. But frankly, this is simply a challenge to all of us to engage with every single delegation and walk them through the evidence. Felly, dwi'n gwirioneddau, mae'n rhaid i dda ni'n gallu gweld ythag bwysig ymlaen nhw'n gweithio'n ddiweddol mewn unedig ym Mhreffydd Cynon, dweud fod yn ei fod yn ddyn nhw'n ddyn nhw'n ddyn nhw'n ddyn nhw. Ond yw'n gwirioneddau, ond o'n ddyn nhw'n gwirionedd yn gweld mae'n dysgu'r skepticydd ym mhreffydd hefyd i'r gwirionedd. F Totally, the first thing is to make sure that the substo meeting in June 2014 is not the same as the last three substo meeting, where it's sort of been acknowledged that people have said, well we don't know enough, or we don't have enough time, and then it's been kicked to the next one, and it's sort of punting down the road has got to stop. Which means that we've got a lot of what to do in the next six months to ask – negotiate what you need in order to be able to advance the discussion, The evidence? What data? Who do you need to speak to? What do you need to understand in order to have a meaningful discussion? I think that's the first order of business. If we can have a successful sub-step then the negotiations should flow. Meantime, outside of the negotiation track, we have two years to show in as many countries in the world, in as many landscapes in the world that there is a positive impact. People are richer and more food secure, and emissions are being reduced and the soil is of better quality. Every time we can do that we provide a different context for the negotiations. Forests are an incredibly important and dynamic part of the discussions. Understanding the relationships between forests and the rest of the landscape is very important. now see the starting of a discussion really about cities and the role such as sub national entities play in really moving forward in terms of admissions reduction, the relationship between forests and in terms of how they work in watersheds and how they reduce admissions and the cities that they often serve I think is something that's only just been angered here inside Cobb. So for me forests are still an absolutely central part of this but the interplay between forest and agriculture, forests and cities ishwys, is just starting to be realised. People have comfort zones, sectors have comfort zones, scientists have comfort zones, policy makers have comfort zones, and we're very good at talking to the people that we know, and it's taken a number of years and real leadership to get researchers from different disciplines working together at an interdisciplinary level in one unit of a forest or one unit of a farm. So getting that and making that systemic and not just episodic or anecdotal is hard and we know it. So as a community can we just sort of put our shoulders back and say okay we understand that we have to be working in a multidisciplinary way across silos and that this is okay, I think it's important. And then the funding has to flow into a interdisciplinary approach. I mean the funding is still siloed as well and I have to take responsibility with others for making sure that the funding reinforces the kind of integration we want to see.