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Oxfam welcomes new FAO report

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on May 30, 2012

On the path to Rio+20, a new FAO report calls for a future with both healthier people and healthier ecosystems. The eradication of hunger and malnutrition are key to achieving sustainable development, FAO says.

Oxfam’s Chief Executive Barbara Stocking welcomed the report, saying that it ”rightly places the need to address the scandal of global hunger if we are to develop in a sustainable way”.

“Despite there being enough food for everyone, more than 18 million people are going hungry in West Africa right now and one in seven people in the world go hungry every day,” Stocking said.

“Leaders meeting at Rio +20 in three weeks time must recognize the urgency needed to overhaul the way we grow and distribute food, especially in the face of constrained natural resources like land, water and energy, and the gathering pace of climate change. Improving access to land and investing in small holder farmers – especially women who are often the main producers – is vital if we are to produce food in a sustainable way for us all to have enough to eat now and in the future.”

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The global state of agriculture

Submitted by Rachel Friedman on May 25, 2012

To mark its 50th anniversary, the US Agency for International Development (USAID) has developed a series of infographics covering the spectrum of activities in which USAID is engaged, from education and technology transfer to health and nutrition. With the Feed the Future initiative being a major focus of USAID’s activities, and the renewed commitment to promoting food security by the G8, the state of food and agriculture is reflected in a number of infographics, including the one below:

Image credit: USAID

G(irls)20 summit: closing the gender gap in agriculture

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on May 24, 2012

Guest blog post by Eve Crowley, FAO Deputy Director for Gender, Equity and Rural Employment. Eve will be one of the panelists at the G(irls)20 Summit taking place in Mexico in advance of the G20 meeting. The G(irls)20 brings together young women, aged 18-20, from G20 countries and the African Union to look at the G20 leaders’ agenda through the lens of the economic empowerment and inclusion of girls and women. Originally published on The Huffington Post.

©FAO/Giulio Napolitano “God first, then man, then camel and lastly girl” – the proverb comes from the Gabra community of northern Kenya and southern Ethiopia, but iterations of this pecking order can be found in communities around the world.

Despite the crucial role that women and girls play in their households and communities, they are all too often seen as a burden not a boon. To change such perceptions (and proverbs), we need to give girls and women access to the resources and opportunities they need to realize their full economic potential.

We also need to create opportunities for women and girls to participate in decision-making. The G(irls)20 Summit does this by providing a group of extraordinary young women a platform to voice their views on how girls and women can play a leading role in global economic development. This year’s summit will focus on the opportunity gained in terms of strategically engaging women in agriculture and the opportunity lost as a result of violence against women.

Women make up, on average, 43 percent of the agricultural labor force in developing countries, but only comprise between 3 and 20 percent of agricultural landholders, with huge variations from country to country.

Female farmers produce less than male farmers, not because they are worse farmers, but because they don’t have the same access as men to agricultural inputs like fertilizer and seed or do not have the same rights as men to buy, sell or inherit land, to open a savings account or borrow money, to sign a contract or sell their produce.

According to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization’s (FAO) most recent State of Food and Agriculture report, just giving women the same access as men to seeds, fertilizer and tools could increase production on women’s farms in developing countries by 20 to 30 percent. That’s enough to lift up to 150 million of the world’s hungry people – more than the entire population of France and the United Kingdom combined – out of hunger.

FAO estimates that feeding a global population of just over 9 billion in 2050 will require a 60 percent increase in global food production, three-fourths of which will need to come from developing countries. An additional alternative that we all need to be exploring is how to drastically reduce food waste, since currently one-third of all food produced is wasted rather than consumed.

As President Obama noted last week on the eve of the G8 summit at Camp David, fighting hunger and poverty requires “all hands on deck”. If we fail to empower women and girls and continue to waste half our human potential, we are fighting with one hand tied behind our back.

Disparities in progress between men and women and between urban and rural areas persist beyond the agriculture sector. Globally, rural women and girls lag far behind urban women and girls and men and boys in every Millennium Development Goal indicator, with precious few exceptions.

Work in the fields combined with household tasks, like preparing food, caring for children and walking miles to fetch water and fuel wood, creates a double burden for women and girls. This burden often prevents them from engaging in income-generating work or attending school, and sometimes places them at increased risk of violence when they are forced to travel great distances from their homes on a daily basis.

Rural women are far likelier to be illiterate, under- or unemployed, to suffer domestic violence and to have less access to services, including prenatal services, than urban women. The children of poor rural women are twice as likely to be underweight, and malnourished girls become malnourished mothers, whose children are 40 percent more likely to die before their fifth birthday than children born in a city.

If we don’t break this cycle now, it will continue to undermine children’s mental and physical development, productivity and health, hobbling our countries’ economic development.

In developing countries economic growth originating in the agricultural sector is at least twice as effective in reducing poverty as growth originating elsewhere. To solve the problems of poverty and hunger, the agriculture sector in these countries – particularly smallholder agriculture in which women are the driving force – needs to be more efficient.

That’s why FAO has placed gender equity in access to resources, goods, services and decision-making among its key strategic objectives, recently launching a policy on gender equality that commits the organization to, among other goals, targeting 30 percent of its operational work and budget at the regional and country levels to women-specific interventions by 2017.

The future of agriculture in developing countries depends on today’s young women and men. FAO’s Junior Farmer Field and Life Schools help create opportunities in farming that match young people’s aspirations for a better future by providing them with agricultural as well as life skills. They learn how to solve problems related to soil, water and nutrient management, but also about gender equality, HIV/AIDS prevention and other social and health issues critical to their survival and futures.

Social and economic inequalities between men and women undermine food security and constrain economic growth and advances in agriculture. My hope is that the G(irls) 20 Summit will help inspire young women to identify ways to level the playing field by prioritizing girls and women as the first step in building a world in which girls won’t be eating last and least but will instead become women leading, on an equal footing with men, the economic growth and development of their communities.

Advancing food and nutrition security – a student perspective

Submitted by admin on May 22, 2012

Guest blog post written by Brendan Rice, a student at the University of Alabama at Birmingham currently working as an intern in FAO’s Washington office. Originally posted at the Universities Fighting World Hunger Blog.

The Chicago Council on Global Affairs’ annual symposium, Advancing Food and Nutrition Security at the 2012 G8 Summit, brought together G8 and African leaders, international organizations, businesses, and civil society to emphasize the importance of agricultural development and nutrition security.

As a student and a member of the growing Universities Fighting World Hunger movement, this event was incredibly powerful and motivating. As students, we frame hunger as a structural issue. Food price volatility and under-investment in agricultural sectors of developing countries are structural issues that continue the crisis of hunger. These underlying causes of hunger can seem infinitely enormous and complex, but the symposium leading up to the G8 Summit at Camp David gives context and invigorates the work that we all do towards making hunger a distant memory. At the symposium, leaders including President Obama, Secretary Clinton, and the rock star Bono showed that advancing food security is a priority. The work that we do on our campuses is not done in isolation. Instead, we are tapping into an energy that is now emanating from the highest levels of power.

At the symposium, President Obama laid out the New Alliance for Food Security and Nutrition, which builds off the commitments made at L’Aquila. The new phase of this shared initiative towards global food security focuses on empowering agricultural growth through country plans, private sector involvement, and G8 commitments.

Framing hunger as a solvable problem is central to the work that we do as students. As a human family, we have the tools, resources, and knowledge to end hunger in our world of plenty. This issue is not necessarily about coming up with a solution. Instead, it is about advancing the steps we already know work to end hunger through creating the public and political will to do so. The symposium and Obama’s announcement set up a framework of global imperatives.

Despite the diverse ideas and sectors represented, there were a number of themes that emerged throughout the symposium, many of which were clearly outlined in Secretary Clinton’s closing speech. These included a focus on smallholder farmers, nutrition with a focus on the first 1000 days of life, and the importance of women in food security. The heads of state of Ethiopia, Ghana, and Tanzania all made clear the importance of investing in the agricultural productivity of smallholder farmers, many of whom are women.

The framework is in place, and now it is time to move towards action. During his speech at the symposium, President Obama called for “all hands on deck.” Students and future leaders are central to maintaining the commitments made and continuing to demand a food-secure world. Secretary Clinton laid out the challenge succinctly in her speech at the symposium. By 2050, there will be 9 billion people on the planet, and agricultural productivity must increase by 70 percent in order to keep pace. Bono stated that this challenge can and will be met, but not without Africa. Bono reminded us that the issue of hunger sears our collective conscience, so as a collective soul, this challenge is one that we must confront.

Representing students from around the world, Universities Fighting World Hunger is moving through strong conviction and grounded motivation to end hunger. To borrow a thought from Secretary Clinton, what can hold us back can be as simple as “plain old inertia.” In this we find hope because as part of the next generation of leaders, the inertia of the morally outrageous status quo of 1 billion people going hungry will be replaced by the exhilarating possibility of a fair and just global food system.

Obama announces new G8 food security initiative for Africa

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on May 18, 2012

Calling food security a moral, economic and security imperative, President Obama today announced a new G8 initiative that he called “a major new partnership to reduce hunger and lift tens of millions of people from poverty.” The New Alliance for Food Security and Nutrition brings together G8 and African governments and the private sector with the aim of reducing hunger and lifting 50 million people out of poverty by 2022 through greater agricultural investment.

The partnership builds on the commitment leaders made during the 2009 G8 meeting in L’Aquila to put the fight against hunger at the top of the development agenda – a fight that is about more than aid, the president said.

The President made the announcement at a Symposium on Global Agriculture and Food Security sponsored by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs on the eve of the G8 Summit at Camp David:

Fifty years ago Africa was an exporter of food.  There is no reason why Africa should not be feeding itself and exporting food again.

President Obama said that 45 companies, “from major international corporations to African companies and cooperatives”, have pledged to invest more than $3 billion to kick-start the initiative.

Read the President’s full speech here.

The heads of FAO, the International Fund for Agricultural Development and the World Food Programme welcomed the initiative.

FAO Deputy Director-General Ann Tutwiler, in attendance at the symposium, said that the New Alliance provides an opportunity to build on successful and encouraging approaches that are already under way and can play a catalytic role.

“African farmers invest three times as much as governments and vastly more than development partners or foreign investors, yet their investments still remain constrained by lack of resources and unfavorable policy environments,” Tutwiler said. “Facilitation of private sector investment should benefit smallholder and family farmers, herders and fishers and in particular the needs of women and youth.”

Through its wide decentralized network and work with government ministries concerned with agriculture, forestry, fisheries and natural resources, FAO is well positioned to assist countries in prioritizing agriculture and getting their policy frameworks right, she said.

Hunger jeopardizes African growth, new report says

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on May 15, 2012

Photo credit: FAO/Alessandro BenedettiSub-Saharan Africa cannot sustain its present economic growth unless it eliminates the hunger that affects nearly a quarter of its people, the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) argues in the newly released Africa Human Development Report 2012: Towards a Food Secure Future.

Launching the report today, UNDP Administrator Helen Clark said:

“Impressive GDP growth rates in Africa have not translated into the elimination of hunger and malnutrition. Inclusive growth and people-centred approaches to food security are needed.”

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USDA celebrates 150 years

Submitted by Rachel Friedman on May 15, 2012

Photo credit: USDA

On May 15, 1862, President Abraham Lincoln signed legislation to create the United States Department of Agriculture. This action was followed by the passing of the Homestead Act, which provided 160 acres of arable land west of the Mississippi River to any head of household for settlement and cultivation. Another piece of legislation that year, The Morrill Land Grant College Act, provided public lands to U.S. states and territories for the establishment of universities that specialized in agricultural research and education. Today, those institutions still provide much of the agricultural research, education and extension services in the country.

Visit the USDA’s website for more on the 150th anniversary and commemorative events.

Guidelines for charting a hunger-free world

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on May 11, 2012

FAO Director-General José Graziano da Silva hailed today’s endorsement by the Committee on World Food Security of voluntary guidelines to improve the way countries govern access rights to land, fisheries and forest resources as a “historic milestone not only for the way in which land tenure is managed, but also for international consensus-building”.

Agreement on the guidelines shows that effective, concrete co-operation on sensitive issues central to food security and economic development is possible, offering cause for optimism as we address other challenges on the path to a world free from hunger.

Next up on the global agenda: establishing principles for responsible agricultural investment.

Read Graziano da Silva’s post on the Guardian’s Poverty Matters blog. Participants in the process leading up to today’s announcement discuss the significance of the guidelines and the next steps in the video below:

Monitoring global trends towards development goals

Submitted by Rachel Friedman on May 9, 2012

A report released by the World Bank and International Monetary Fund last month suggests that good progress has been made on reaching some of the Millennium Development Goals, such as reducing extreme poverty, while progress on other targets, such as those related to child and maternal mortality, has been much slower.

Global Monitoring Report 2012: Food Prices, Nutrition, and the Millennium Development Goals places particular emphasis on high food prices as a significant contributor to continued poverty and undernourishment.

Read the blog post and press release on the report.

Database of large-scale land deals launched

Submitted by Rachel Friedman on May 7, 2012

International land investments, also often referred to as “land grabs”, have been garnering considerable attention in the past couple of years. The Land Portal, facilitated by the International Land Coalition (ILC), recently launched Land Matrix, a public database of large-scale land deals. Land Matrix has documented 1,008 deals since the year 2000, amounting to 76.3 million hectares of land, roughly equal to half the size of western Europe. Nearly half of the land acquired is in Africa.

Key features of the database include interactive maps and different scales of visualization (from big picture down to country details). Users can also suggest land deals that are not already included in the database, allowing for constant updates and growth in the available information.

Forestry, mineral resources, agriculture, livestock and tourism opportunities contribute as drivers of investments, but food and agriculture are at the root of most deals – motivated by high food prices and shortages of other resources like water. 

Read an article on the Land Matrix from The Guardian.



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