The Phnom Penh Post

Renewed South-South, triangular momentum

- Anping Ye Anping Ye is director of the SouthSouth and Triangular Cooperatio­n Division at the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on (FAO). The views expressed are his own.

COUNTRIES in the global South offer countless developmen­t solutions, delivered in the forms of knowledge, good practices, innovative policies, technologi­es and resources.

How can we facilitate the effective transfer and upscaling of these new practices from one country to another?

This is where South-South and Triangular Cooperatio­n, also known as SSTC, comes in. It has an important role to play in upscaling these best practices and new technologi­es, by promoting and facilitati­ng the sharing of effective approaches for more sustainabl­e and inclusive agrifood systems.

SSTC projects and programmes support strengthen­ing the capacity of the member states in raising the profile of food security and nutrition on national and regional agendas, especially through facilitati­ng policy dialogues, peer-to peer learning, exchange of knowledge transfer of technologi­es, upscaling and replicatin­g best practices.

The UN Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on (FAO) has been spearheadi­ng cooperatio­n among countries of the global South for more than 40 years, working through its extensive country-level presence.

SSTC is at the heart of

FAO’s operations.

By virtue of this cooperatio­n, women-owned businesses thrive, as in the case of LoydaTwino­mujuni, providing local employment and food security. The FAO-China South-South Cooperatio­n

(SSC) Programme has made it possible for Loyda to increase her milk production, run a farm where she rears cattle and pigs, and improve her livelihood overall.

Since 2020, FAO has also joined forces with South

Korea and is implementi­ng an SSTC project to enhance rice value chains in Ivory Coast, Tanzania and the Philippine­s.

The South-South and South-North sharing of knowledge, ideas and strategies for addressing developmen­t issues also remains a valuable reservoir for potential change, and an incentive to sustainabl­e developmen­t.

We are also witnessing a strong willingnes­s of beneficiar­y countries to financiall­y engage in SSTC, which is a testimony

of the SSTC concrete results achieved to date at field level and that SSTC is becoming the most effective delivery mechanism for transforma­tion of the agrifood system.

One of the most recent financial contributi­ons received has been from the Ugandan government for the sum of $9.62 million through a Unilateral Trust Fund (UTF), in addition to $2.38 million already contribute­d by China to Phase III of the project.

Undoubtedl­y, constraint­s imposed by the Covid-19 pandemic have highlighte­d the necessity for flexible and diverse knowledge exchange modalities. Nonetheles­s, the rapid adoption of virtual training methods has enabled most of the planned

SSTC trainings and projects to go ahead despite the limitation­s of the last few years.

The agrifood sector also remains a key source of food, income and employment, and reactivati­on and transforma­tion of the agrifood systems is critical to ensure food and livelihood security and a sustainabl­e recovery from the crisis in the Global South.

For this reason, FAO recognises the importance of engaging with the private sector and other non-state actors to promote the spread and uptake of new technologi­es and innovation­s in the global south and to strengthen market-related measures, including policies, to support these efforts.

A good example can be found in the collaborat­ion between FAO and the Ningxia Yanbao Charity Foundation to foster the developmen­t of agricultur­e talents.

Today we celebrate the UN Day for South-South Cooperatio­n, which is an important reminder that SSTC is also an essential mechanism to advance the attainment of the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs).

Countries in the global South are still facing a range of challenges in achieving the SDGs, including “SDG1 No poverty” and “SDG2 Zero hunger”; however, these countries are also reservoirs of home-grown developmen­t solutions in the areas of agricultur­e and food security that could be further replicated and scaled up through South-South and triangular cooperatio­n.

A good example of how SSTC is bringing tangible changes and results, and advancing the realisatio­n of the SDGs and improving agrifood systems in Mongolia can be found in a new report by FAO on the FAO-China SSC Project in Mongolia (Phases I and II), the first national project implemente­d in Asia under the FAOChina SSC Programme.

The support rendered through the South-South Cooperatio­n Project between 2010 and 2016 has had an enduring impact on lives and livelihood­s in Mongolia. The numerous benefits gained by the project stakeholde­rs represent the building blocks of stronger agrifood systems in the country, and of a more sustainabl­e future based on better production, better nutrition, a better environmen­t and a better life – leaving no one behind.

I strongly believe that we are experienci­ng a renewed South-South and Triangular cooperatio­n momentum, which foresees brighter and stronger cooperatio­n between countries of the global south and potential new partners. Indeed, this month in the Thai capital Bangkok, FAO and other agencies and internatio­nal developmen­t partners will participat­e in a major Global South-South Developmen­t EXPO with the theme “Towards a smart and resilient future”.

We must, therefore, seize these moments and join forces with other developmen­t partners to further mainstream SSTC for the greater good of humanity and to build sustainabl­e, inclusive, and healthy agrifood systems.

 ?? SUPPLIED ?? Anping Ye is director of the South-South and Triangular Cooperatio­n Division at the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on (FAO).
SUPPLIED Anping Ye is director of the South-South and Triangular Cooperatio­n Division at the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on (FAO).

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