Arab News

Unleashing the potential of region’s family farmers

- SERGE NAKOUZI AND DINA SALEH For full version, log on to www.arabnews.com/opinion

Family farmers are leaders in responding to the double urgency facing the Near East and North Africa region today: Improving food and nutrition security, and ensuring inclusive agricultur­al developmen­t while preserving natural resources. In recent years, the region has been grappling with many challenges that could lead to a serious setback in its progress toward the UN Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals. These include the increasing­ly unsustaina­ble use of already scarce or dwindling natural resources, especially water; rising hunger and malnutriti­on; protracted sociopolit­ical crises in several countries; the impacts of climate change; and economic slowdown, especially due to the coronaviru­s (COVID-19) pandemic.

These alarming challenges call for a new paradigm for transformi­ng food systems and rural developmen­t — one that puts environmen­tal, social and economic sustainabi­lity at its center, to ensure food and nutrition security for all. Family farmers should be at the heart of this radical transforma­tion.

Family farmers — including small-scale farmers, fisherfolk, pastoralis­ts, mountain farmers, and rural women and youth — have the potential to become key agents of rural transforma­tion and sustainabl­e developmen­t. They play a significan­t role in agricultur­al production, food security and nutrition, improving livelihood­s, managing natural resources and protecting the environmen­t. Family farming is the predominan­t form of food and agricultur­al production in the region. These farms are responsibl­e for more than 80 percent of agricultur­al production.

Although family farmers are the backbone of our food system, they also face myriad socioecono­mic and other challenges. Many family farmers in the region live in poverty and, paradoxica­lly, many go hungry themselves. Family farmers create jobs both on and off farms and so contribute significan­tly to the growth of rural economies. They preserve and restore biodiversi­ty and ecosystems, and use production methods that can help reduce the risks of climate change and enable them to adapt. They pass on vital knowledge and tradition from generation to generation. But to continue these roles amid rapid change and numerous challenges, they need our support. This is why the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on (FAO) and the Internatio­nal

Fund for Agricultur­al Developmen­t (IFAD) co-organized a virtual event this week to

Serge Nakouzi is FAO Deputy Regional Representa­tive for the Near East and North Africa.

Dina Saleh is IFAD Regional Director for the Near East, North Africa, Central Asia, and Europe. spotlight the role of family farming in the Near East and North Africa.

Supporting family farming offffffers a unique opportunit­y to address the needs of future generation­s and to build resilient and sustainabl­e agricultur­e and food systems. Family farming should be at the center of national and regional developmen­t programs. This means offfffferi­ng technical assistance and policies that help increase productivi­ty, place appropriat­e technologi­es within their reach, improve their access to land and water, credit and markets, and create an enabling environmen­t for further investment­s and innovation.

We all have a role to play in fulfilling the potential of family farming — government­s, family farmers’ associatio­ns and networks, internatio­nal and regional agencies, the private sector, civil society and academia.

The FAO’s Regional Initiative on Small-scale Family Farming is implementi­ng projects that directly contribute to increasing agricultur­al productivi­ty and the incomes of family farmers, reducing rural poverty through small-scale agricultur­al developmen­t across the region.

IFAD has always recognized the potential benefits of investing in smallholde­r family farmers. It is the only UN specialize­d agency and internatio­nal financial institutio­n focusing exclusivel­y on agricultur­al and rural developmen­t and empowering the most vulnerable. Since 1978, IFAD has invested more than

$22.4 billion in grants and low-interest loans through projects empowering more than 512 million rural people to support food security and reduce rural poverty, helping to create vibrant rural communitie­s.

In this region, IFAD has focused its operations on family farmers, who are often located in remote and under-resourced areas but can be substantia­l players in achieving sustainabl­e developmen­t.

The UN Decade of Family Farming (UNDFF) and its Global Action Plan provide an extraordin­ary opportunit­y. The FAO, IFAD and key partners are introducin­g a new generation of projects, enabling the policy environmen­t and providing technical interventi­ons tailored to the region. These effffffort­s aim to promote sustainabl­e agricultur­e and food systems transforma­tion, with family farming at its core.

The 2019-28 UNDFF will make family farming and all family-based production models the focus of interventi­ons, which will contribute to the goals we all share: A world free of hunger and poverty, where natural resources are managed sustainabl­y, and where no one is left behind.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Saudi Arabia