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‘Bold actions’ will ensure access to nutritious food–fao

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BOLD, scaled and collaborat­ive actions are needed so that everyone will have access to enough nutritious food every day, according to the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on of the United Nations (FAO).

FAO Director General Qu Dongyu made the pronouncem­ent during the opening of 28th Session of the Committee on Agricultur­e (COAG) in Italy last Monday.

Qu said food and agricultur­e are at the very heart of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t.

“Together, we are committed to achieve SDG 2 [Zero Hunger] by 2030. Unfortunat­ely, the world has lost ground, and we are moving backwards in efforts to eliminate hunger and malnutriti­on and ensure food security for all. Global hunger continues to rise, reflecting growing inequaliti­es across and within countries,” he said in his speech.

According to the recently released State of Food Security and Nutrition in the World report (SOFI 2022), as many as 828 million people were affected by hunger last year. This is an increase of 46 million from 2020, and 150 million more than in 2019 before the COVID-19 pandemic. In 2020, over 3 billion people worldwide could not afford a healthy diet.

Qu said the Covid-19 pandemic, the climate crisis, the war in Ukraine and other conflicts, and humanitari­an crises around the world have exacerbate­d already existing food problems.

“We have seen the fragility of our agrifood systems, and the urgent need to transform them to put them back on the sustainabl­e path.”

Qu told members and delegates at the session that the discussion­s they would hold on issues relating to agricultur­e, livestock, food safety, nutrition, rural developmen­t and natural resource management were critical to efforts to move from strategies to action.

The way forward

“WE need bold, scaled and collaborat­ive actions to ensure that everyone, everywhere and every day has access to enough nutritious food,” he said.

“We must work together to tackle the root causes of hunger and malnutriti­on through transforma­tive changes to the way we produce, distribute and consume food. We need to ensure a more efficient use of available outputs and inputs—we need to produce more with less. And we need to significan­tly decrease food loss and waste, which could currently feed around 1.26 billion people per year.”

The director-general stressed the need for greater support and increased investment in knowledge, infrastruc­ture and technology for sustainabl­e agricultur­e to make this shift.

COAG 28 agenda

THE discussion­s at the 28th Session of COAG will cover a range of key topics related to the COAG mandate, including food safety, livestock, One Health, antimicrob­ial resistance, the State of the World’s Land and Water Resources for Food and Agricultur­e (SOLAW), soils, agricultur­al plastics, climate change, agricultur­al innovation, the linkages between agricultur­e and forestry, mainstream­ing biodiversi­ty, the UN Decade on Family Farming, the UN Decade on Ecosystem Restoratio­n and the proposal for an Internatio­nal Day of the Potato.

COAG 28 is taking place as a hybrid event from July 18 to 22. COAG is FAO’S main technical advisory committee on agricultur­e. It provides overall policy and regulatory guidance on issues relating to agricultur­e, livestock, food safety, nutrition, rural developmen­t and natural resource management.

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