Gulf News

Food security challenges

In today’s globalised world, solving transbound­ary issues such as food security and climate change requires a concerted effort between domestic and foreign policy stakeholde­rs

- Special to Gulf News

fter several years’ lull, food security is back on the agenda. The 2007–2008 food price crisis had acted as a wake-up call for many importing states, including in the Arabian Gulf, regarding their vulnerabil­ity to food price and supply risks. However, after some subsequent debate on overseas land investment­s, food security has not featured in a major way in domestic discussion­s in the region.

This time around, the discussion is not about short-term risks, however, but longer-term and potentiall­y much more consequent­ial ones, including climate change. Signalling this shift in focus, both food and climate change featured among the key topics discussed at the recent World Government Summit in Dubai. Thinkers and leaders highlighte­d the negative impacts of climate change on global food security and explored related solutions.

At the newly-launched Climate in Action Forum, Jose Graziano da Silva, Director-General of the Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on of the United Nations (FAO), called for less wasteful food and water consumptio­n and for support to smallholde­r farmers and agricultur­al research.

Climate risk expert Thomas Homer-Dixon stressed the need to invest in technologi­es for adapting to the impacts of climate change. He also reminded people that any adaptation efforts will be futile without ambitious reductions in global greenhouse gas emissions.

Climate change is a key driver of global food insecurity. Its negative impacts are already seen in agricultur­e worldwide, as confirmed by the latest authoritat­ive report by the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change, from 2014. According to the FAO, climate change is expected to affect crop productivi­ty and variabilit­y, and potentiall­y production patterns in many regions.

Climate change, however, is not the only factor exerting pressure on the global food production system. Population growth, rising living standards and the pace of improvemen­ts in efficiency of agricultur­al production will also play into the equation of how much food will be available on global food markets.

In addition, food exports are concentrat­ed among a few countries. According to the FAO, in a decade’s time, five countries, or fewer, will dominate global exports (with a 70 per cent share or more) for 25 key agricultur­al products each. For example, the top five exporters of soybeans account for close to 95 per cent of global exports.

In a shorter timeframe, the situation looks a little less worrisome: After several years of turbulence, the FAO and the Organisati­on for Economic Co-operation and Developmen­t declared in 2016 that an era of high world food prices was over. Lower price levels are expected to persist for the time being.

For countries that depend highly on food imports, such as the UAE, the current benign period in the global food markets is a welcome one. At the same time, long-term risks should not be ignored. Food import dependency is a structural characteri­stic of the Gulf Cooperatio­n Council countries. This dependence therefore needs to be carefully managed.

Global regulatory environmen­ts

Estimates of the UAE’s food import dependency range from 85 per cent to more than 90 per cent. However, in the longer term, a recently-concluded study by the Abu Dhabi Global Environmen­tal Data Initiative on the potential negative impacts of climate change on the UAE’s food imports found that, over the next three to four decades, most of the UAE’s imports from most of its trade partners could be constraine­d.

In public discourse, there has been less attention among the expert community to the foreign policy aspects of food security, which range from global regulatory environmen­ts, through regional cooperatio­n to bilateral relations with food exporting countries. A roundtable series led by the Emirates Wildlife Society, which examined climate change impacts and risks to different sectors in the UAE, seemed to indicate — based on this participan­t’s perspectiv­e — that a lot of thinking among the expert community is dedicated to the sustainabi­lity of domestic production and less on managing the foreign policy side.

Food wastage has also received little attention. On an average, countries waste a third of the food produced, and the UAE is estimated to lose billions of dirhams through food loss each year.

Rising to the challenge, the Ministry of Climate Change and Environmen­t is currently working both on a climate change strategy and a food diversific­ation policy. The strategies will be based on extensive stakeholde­r consultati­on and will be able to benefit from the important groundwork undertaken by UAE-based research organisati­ons. Also, earlier this year, Dubai announced it would target zero food waste and launched the UAE Food Bank to support related efforts.

The UAE is a highly food secure country and its economic wealth enables it to implement a number of measures to ensure that this continues into the future. These include tariff and price-related measures, consumer subsidies, support to domestic agricultur­e and manufactur­ing capacities, overseas investment­s and strategic food reserves.

At the same time, even more could be done, as I will argue in a working paper to be published shortly by the Emirates Diplomatic Academy. With the UAE’s food security depending to a large extent on other countries, food should also be understood as a foreign policy issue.

By applying this lens, a number of additional tools can be applied, which include working for a favourable internatio­nal regulatory environmen­t, supporting regional cooperatio­n on food security and managing bilateral ties with food trade partners in a holistic manner.

In today’s globalised world, solving transbound­ary issues such as food security and climate change requires a concerted effort between domestic and foreign-policy stakeholde­rs. The stakes are particular­ly high for a country like the UAE that still depends on significan­t oil export revenues and will continue to depend physically to a large extent on food imports. The sights are now set firmly. Success will depend on maintainin­g the momentum.

Dr Mari Luomi is senior research fellow at Emirates Diplomatic Academy.

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