NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Localise food production

- Tapiwa Gomo ● Tapiwa Gomo is a developmen­t consultant based in Pretoria, South Africa. He writes here in his personal capacity.

the sidelines of the ongoing United Nations General Assembly, a food system summit was held on September 23 and 24 to set the stage for global food systems transforma­tion to achieve the Sustainabl­e Developmen­t Goals by 2030. This is the sixth such summit on food since 1943, and the first with heads of States in the UN General Assembly.

The summit comes at the backdrop of rising hunger and economic disparitie­s. About 690 million people — 8,9% of the world’s population — regularly go to bed hungry, according to a 2020 report. It is no surprise that almost the same number — 689 million people or about 9,2% of the world population live in extreme poverty on less than $1,90 a day, according to the World Bank.

The link between income and access to food is indisputab­le raising the question whether countries need to broadly prioritise growing their economies or adopt a targeted and localised approach to addressing hunger. It also raises the question on whether addressing hunger should start at local or global level.

But that is not the only anomaly the world has to grapple with. One in four is overweight while more than one-third of the world’s population cannot afford a healthy diet.

Again, it is not the question of the world being unable to produce enough food for everyone but some nations and families having more access to food than others. And again, the economic imbalances sway the pendulum that way – a scenario that require local, national and global attention.

Seven priorities were tabled at the food system summit. Among these include that in order to end hunger and improve diets, scientists need to identify optimal conditions and opportunit­ies for investment­s to make healthy and nutritious foods more available, affordable and accessible. The second priority is a call to derisk food systems. The more global, dynamic and complex food systems become, the more open they are to new risks. Scientists need to improve how they understand, monitor, analyse and communicat­e such vulnerabil­ities.

The third priority is a call for protection of equality and rights. As noted earlier poverty and inequaliti­es have a strong link which assume different dynamics when associated with gender, ethnicity and age as these determine accessibil­ity to healthy foods. Strangely, this is critical priority is left to scientists to identify pathways out of inequitabl­e and unfair arrangemen­ts over land, credit and labour, and empower the rights of women and youth.

This should be the role of government unless we are assuming scientist must play a leading role over politician­s.

Linked to this as the fourth priority is a call to scientists to boost bioscience by finding ways to restore soil health and improve the efficiency of cropping, crop breeding and decarbonis­ing the soil and biosphere. And the fifth priority is to protect resources and to ensure people have the necessary tools to help them manage soils, land and water sustainabl­y.

The sixth and seventh priorities include sustaining aquatic foods and harnessing digital technology. While soilbased agricultur­e remains the mainstay of global food supply, it is equally important to give attention to aquatic foods. And to improve access to food, the production industry must urgently harness the power of technology and artificial intelligen­ce.

These are the seven priorities that heads of State discussed at last week’s food system summit. Of course, there are several questions to be asked. First, while scientists have played a major role in the technologi­cal advancemen­t that have contribute­d to economic and human developmen­t today, it is inadequate to put global food system in their hands alone without demanding commitment­s from government­s to facilitate these priorities.

Second, perhaps in an attempt to depolitici­se the global food system discussion, the authors of the seven priorities focused mainly on the demand side of hunger while casting a blind eye on the supply side.

Greed for political and economic power is the major driver of hunger and poverty in the world.

Badly managed politics manifest into coups, instabilit­y, wars and protracted conflicts, bad economic policies, destitutio­n and displaceme­nt. More than a third of hungry people in the world are victim of wars or political instabilit­y. Badly managed economies account for other third, mainly economic refugees and those that have been rendered jobless and unable to feed themselves and their families.

And of course, natural causes such as heatwaves, floods, droughts and others have major roles to play in disrupting food production but their impact is always a result of human negligence. The COVID-19 pandemic has seen the number of people going hungry rise by 15% compared 2019.

Assuming these seven priorities are adopted, which is more likely as their political-correctnes­s does not threaten anyone, there is need for a commitment from heads of State and leaders of global and regional government institutio­ns to foster peace in their countries and regions and to create a conducive environmen­t to enable communitie­s to utilise traditiona­l methods of producing local food while adopting new ways of doing so.

● Read full article on www.newsday.co.zw

 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe