The National - News

Ending global hunger is our most urgent mission

- Dr QU Dongyu is the director general of the Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on of the UN

The UN’s food agency was born in the wake of catastroph­e. Three quarters of a century later, its mission has been made more relevant to the world at large by another global scourge.

I won’t deny it: when I took over as director general of the Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on of the United Nations (FAO) last year, I could barely contain my emotion. FAO’s foundation, after all, had preceded – if only by a matter of days – that of the UN itself.

That I, born into a Chinese peasant family, would come to lead such a venerable institutio­n was awe-inspiring enough.

What I did not expect was that a short while into my tenure, the world would be confronted with a challenge on a scale not seen since the end of the Second World War.

The Covid-19 pandemic has not only taken a toll on human lives and health, it also threatens the livelihood­s of hundreds of millions of people across the world.

Food security, until recently a rather foreign concept to many living in well-to-do countries, made headlines around the globe and set the agenda at many high-level events.

Let’s return to 1945, the year FAO was founded: a third of the victims of the Second World War had died of malnutriti­on and associated diseases. Famines had decimated population­s over the previous decades.

So nations came together and FAO was establishe­d on 16 October, 1945. Its founders invested in the new institutio­n the world’s aspiration – to help the world rebuild and expand agricultur­e and to end hunger forever.

Today’s crisis may be less tangibly apocalypti­c. But the numbers are no less staggering. Even before Covid-19 hit, nearly 700 million people were undernouri­shed. The economic disruption linked to the pandemic may add another 130 million or so to these.

In the early days of the pandemic, when shelves went empty; when fruit-pickers went missing; when markets fell silent, we realised that we were taking for granted these services and the people that provide them. The moral imperative to feed the world – safely, durably and with dignity for all – is as urgent now as it was after the War.

I am aware, as I write these lines, that the analogy with 1945 can only get us so far. Back then, the crisis was one of production. FAO’s first years were largely focused on expanding the output of farms, boosting yields, supporting mechanisat­ion and irrigation schemes.

Over subsequent decades, this vision became immensely more complex, enriched with environmen­tal and sustainabi­lity concerns. A more holistic understand­ing of developmen­t set in.

Until the mid-2010s, the world was making impressive progress in reducing hunger. But it has since been rising again. Conflict and extreme weather patterns are to blame, at least in part.

What we now need is smart, systemic action to get the food to those who need it and improve it for those who have it. Action to prevent crops from rotting in the field, for lack of efficient supply chains. Action to enhance the use of digital tools and artificial intelligen­ce, so as to predict threats to harvest, automatica­lly trigger crop insurance and cut climate risk. Action to rescue biodiversi­ty from relentless erosion. Action to turn cities into the farms of tomorrow. Action by government­s to implement policies that make healthy diets more accessible. Action by agencies like mine to turn to thinktanks and action-tanks rolled into one, linking up with the research community and the private sector to unleash the power of innovation.

So at 75, FAO is far from thinking of riding off into the sunset. We are not day-dreaming either. Covid-19 has made it abundantly clear that our mission is as relevant as when our founders created FAO in 1945. Cataclysms spur renewal. The pandemic has reminded everyone that food security and nutritious diets matter to all.

This is why FAO is today embarking on the next chapter in its story with a renewed sense of purpose. On the structural side, a flatter leadership structure and a modular approach allow for a more rapid reaction when crises hit.

A comprehens­ive and holistic Covid-19 response and recovery programme addresses the socio-economic impacts of the pandemic, mitigating the immediate pressures, while strengthen­ing the long-term resilience of food systems and livelihood­s.

Our hand-in-hand matchmakin­g initiative accelerate­s agricultur­al transforma­tion and sustainabl­e rural developmen­t in countries that have the highest rates of poverty and hunger.

It is supported by a geospatial platform designed as an opensource public good that is already aggregatin­g vast amounts of food security data.

The position of a chief scientist has been establishe­d to sharpen knowledge generation and drive scientific partnershi­ps geared to the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals.

The newly reformed FAO is more inclusive, efficient and dynamic, focusing on what we have designated as the “Four betters”: better production, better nutrition, a better environmen­t, a better life.

We strongly believe that the future is made of such gestures – by ourselves, by our partners, by civil society. It takes vast numbers to achieve Zero Hunger. Indeed, it takes all of us.

Until the mid-2010s, the world was reducing hunger. In part, progress was disrupted by conflicts and extreme weather

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 ?? AFP ?? Malnourish­ed children at a camp for Syrians displaced by conflict, in Aleppo province on September 28
AFP Malnourish­ed children at a camp for Syrians displaced by conflict, in Aleppo province on September 28
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