The Guardian Australia

Invest in small farmers or world will face regular food crises, says UN agency chief

- Kaamil Ahmed

In his first week in the job, the new head of the UN’s agricultur­al finance fund admits he has no small task ahead. Alvaro Lario takes up the role as head of the Internatio­nal Fund for Agricultur­al Developmen­t amid a global food crisis, which he warned could become a regular occurrence.

Lario wants the IFAD to focus on investing in the resilience of smallscale farmers so they can produce food for themselves and are not left at the mercy of external shocks.

“Resilient means that when you have a shock to your income – like currently, with inflation – when you have a shock coming from extreme climate, you’re not going to fall from the brink of poverty into poverty or food insecurity,” said Lario.

The current food crisis, exacerbate­d by the war in Ukraine, would happen again – and soon – unless world leaders addressed decades of underinves­tment in how food was grown and delivered, he warned.

He said hundreds of billions of dollars needed to be directed towards small farms by investing in water and soil conservati­on, offering low-interest loans, access to markets, and boosting productivi­ty.

“What we’re seeing is that they are currently not even able to actually produce their [own] food, many of them have to sell their assets … because they don’t have enough to feed themselves.”

Lario said the impact of war in Ukraine had disrupted shipping of key crops for months and caused fertiliser prices to jump, exacerbati­ng existing problems as 150 million people had fallen into hunger before the war.

“If we do not invest right now, in terms of tens or hundreds of billions, even if we resolve the Ukraine war soon, in two to five years we will be in the same situation,” he said.

“In the short term, we’ve had a lot of climate shocks, droughts and flooding that have also made it much worse, but generally, the fact that we have not

really paid enough attention to how food is produced, how food is distribute­d, how food is stored, and the creation of jobs in many of these rural areas, is at the forefront of the crisis.”

The IFAD is a Rome-based UN financial agency that works with the UN’s Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on and World Food Programme, as well as the private sector,to promote food security through sustainabl­e agricultur­e by providing grants and cheap loans to farmers in developing countries.

Global food prices reached their highest recorded levels in March after Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and, while they have since dropped, they remain 8% higher than a year ago.

There is concern too about the continued high price of fertiliser affecting agricultur­al productivi­ty, with sanctions limiting shipments from Russia, the world’s largest exporter of fertiliser, as well as a reduction in the amount coming from China and lower overall fertiliser production in Europe.

Lario said these heightened prices were hard for farmers to pass on to consumers, which is why the internatio­nal community needed to finance farmers who did not receive assistance from their government­s, unlike farmers in richer countries.

“The way of actually tackling poverty, of tackling food insecurity, of tackling the financing of food systems, needs always to start with this longterm rural transforma­tion and bringing small-scale producers to the table,” he said.

 ?? Photograph: Flavio Ianniello/IFAD ?? Alvaro Lario says tackling poverty and food insecurity must start by transformi­ng rural areas with cheap loans, and improved productivi­ty and market access.
Photograph: Flavio Ianniello/IFAD Alvaro Lario says tackling poverty and food insecurity must start by transformi­ng rural areas with cheap loans, and improved productivi­ty and market access.

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