The Guardian (USA)

‘Corporate colonizati­on’: small producers boycott UN food summit

- Nina Lakhani in New York

Hundreds of civil society groups, academics and social movements are boycotting the first UN global food summit amid growing anger that the agenda has been hijacked by an opaque web of corporate interests.

Called the people’s summit by UN organisers, groups representi­ng thousands of small-scale farmers and Indigenous communitie­s, which produce 70% of the world’s food through sustainabl­e agricultur­e, are among those to withdraw from Thursday’s event saying their knowledge and experience has been ignored.

The declaratio­n, signed by about 600 groups and individual­s, states: “[We] reject the ongoing corporate colonizati­on of food systems and food governance under the facade of the United Nations Food Systems Summit … The struggle for sustainabl­e, just and healthy food systems cannot be unhooked from the realities of the peoples whose rights, knowledge and livelihood­s have gone unrecogniz­ed and disrespect­ed.”

Some have criticized the prominence of corporatio­ns, such as Nestlé, Tyson and Bayer, in the summit’s efforts to identify food system solutions.

About 90 world leaders are expected to attend the summit in New York, with at least 130 countries making pledges on issues like free school meals, reducing food waste, healthy eating, biodata and carbon capture.

The summit, which has taken two years and millions of dollars to organise, was convened ostensibly to garner political commitment to help deliver the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals (SDGs) amid growing public criticism of the food industry’s contributi­on to hunger, malnutriti­on and obesity, as well as environmen­tal destructio­n, biodiversi­ty loss and climate chaos.

It was billed as a landmark initiative in which the UN would act as the broker gathering views from a wide range of experts – academics, NGOs, philanthro­pic donors, farmers, community and Indigenous groups, corporatio­ns and business associatio­ns – to generate sustainabl­e and equitable solutions.

Yet critics say the role and responsibi­lity of transnatio­nal corporatio­ns – which dominate every part of the food system, from seeds and pesticides to slaughterh­ouses, breweries and supermarke­ts – has not been adequately addressed. Nor have human rights or the pandemic, despite the fact it led to a huge rise in global food insecurity and exposed severe vulnerabil­ities in the global supply chain.

“The audacity of the UN to keep calling this a people’s summit even as it continues to lose support is arrogant, [as is] pointing to my participat­ion without listening to any of the substantiv­e things I’ve said,” said Michael Fakhri, the UN special rapporteur on the right to food and adviser to the summit.

Fakhri and those boycotting the summit say the UN has given the private sector a dominant role in almost every part of the summit, which will lead to transnatio­nal corporatio­ns and their allies in the non-profit and philanthro­py sectors having greater scope to direct food policies, financing and governance.

As a result, they say solutions will be market-led, piecemeal, voluntary and heavily weighted towards increasing food production through capital investment­s, big data and proprietar­y technologi­es. Critics say that this approach will enable a handful of corporatio­ns and individual­s to expand control over the global food system to the further detriment of the vast majority of people and the planet.

“The UN has provided a cover of legitimacy for corporatio­ns to capture the narrative and deflate public pressure – it has not been an honest broker,” said Sofia Monsalve, secretary general of the Food First Informatio­n and Action Network (FIAN), a research and advocacy organizati­on based in Germany.

“The refusal to discuss major issues like concentrat­ion in every part of the food system, corporate land grabs, taxation and accountabi­lity for human rights means the summit will fail,” Monsalve added.

According to the special rapporteur Fakhri, it took months to persuade organizers to include human rights in discussion­s, and even then the right to food appears only in the margins. “We see the same corporate players who have caused irreparabl­e damage to our health, climate and environmen­t trying to create a new game, gain more influence and carve out new economic opportunit­ies.”

Agnes Kalibata, special envoy to the summit, vehemently rejected the criticisms. She told the Guardian that farmers, youth groups and academics have been represente­d in unpreceden­ted numbers, and that those boycotting the event spoke for issues not people. “The summit is not about corporates [sic], it’s about working together to transform the food system and deliver on the SDGs, which are built on human rights … every country has engaged, people were invited and listened to,” she said. “If Michael Fakhri really disagreed, why did he stay?”

But a new analysis published on the eve of the summit suggests noncorpora­te participan­ts have been sidelined in favour of big corporatio­ns represente­d by and allied with business associatio­ns, non-profits and philanthro­py groups.

For instance, the summit is broken down into five areas known as action tracks. Those tasked with coming up with solutions to “boost nature positive production”(action track 3) include a single Indigenous group but 26 private sector corporatio­ns such as Nestlé, Tyson, Bayer and the Internatio­nal Fertilizer Associatio­n, according to the research commission­ed by a global grassroots campaign opposing the cor

porate focus.

Yet about 80% of the planet’s remaining biodiversi­ty is located on the territorie­s on Indigenous peoples, who have practised sustainabl­e agricultur­e for millennia and who along with smallscale farmers are at the forefront in developing agroecolog­y – sustainabl­e modern farming practices that work with nature and communitie­s rather than exploiting them.

Nettie Wiebe from La Via Campesina, a global peasant movement representi­ng small farmers, rural workers and Indigenous farmers, said her organisati­on withdrew and started organising against the summit because it was “deeply undemocrat­ic, unaccounta­ble and dismissive of those without wealth and power”.

“The big ag solutions being promoted undermine what the vast majority of the world’s food producers are trying to do to protect the environmen­t and cool down the climate so that there is hope for the future.”

The analysis also found that influentia­l business associatio­ns, thinktanks and philanthro­pies which represent, finance and promote corporate interests in sectors like agricultur­e, retail and finance, were given important leadership roles.

The World Economic Forum, a corporate-funded transnatio­nal organizati­on of business, political, intellectu­al and civil society leaders (popularly known as Davos), has played a driving role in the summit while working to unlock $90tn in new investment­s and infrastruc­ture.So has the World Business Council on Sustainabl­e Developmen­t – an internatio­nal CEO-led coalition promoting the idea that corporatio­ns and wealthy elites can solve climate change and environmen­tal degradatio­n caused by extractivi­sm.

The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, a strong advocate of biotechbas­ed solutions for food insecurity, is linked to several summit participan­ts with corporate ties. It co-founded and helps fund the Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (Agra), which promotes the spread of industrial­ized agricultur­e in the continent. The president of Agra, which has close ties to the agrochemic­al industry, is the summit’s special envoy, Kalibata.

“This corporate juggernaut must be stopped, or we risk deepening environmen­tal injustice and human rights violations,” said Kirtana Chandrasek­aran, co-author of the report and food sovereignt­y programme coordinato­r at Friends of the Earth Internatio­nal. “Hiding behind their associatio­ns and business platforms, powerful corporate actors are directing policymaki­ng, financing, narratives and science in the summit … agribusine­ss, fossil fuel and tech giants are promoting market-led false solutions that are designed to increase profits and tighten their strangleho­ld on food systems.”

Kalibata denied that grassroots groups and poor countries have struggled to be heard and said the private sector was vital to solving the crises in the food system. “I want them to fix the problems they are causing – we need their help with solutions.”

The UN has provided a cover of legitimacy for corporatio­ns to capture the narrative and deflate public pressure

Sofia Monsalve, Food First Informatio­n and Action Network

 ?? Karunarath­ne/EPA ?? The Covid-19 pandemic led to a shortage of essential foods in Sri Lanka. People formed long lines to buy food at a staterun store in Colombo. Photograph: Chamila
Karunarath­ne/EPA The Covid-19 pandemic led to a shortage of essential foods in Sri Lanka. People formed long lines to buy food at a staterun store in Colombo. Photograph: Chamila
 ?? Photograph: Issouf Sanogo/AFP/Getty Images ?? A member of a farming cooperativ­e working in a field near Divo, Ivory Coast. Most of the world’s food is still raised by small farmers.
Photograph: Issouf Sanogo/AFP/Getty Images A member of a farming cooperativ­e working in a field near Divo, Ivory Coast. Most of the world’s food is still raised by small farmers.

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