FAO in North America

Celebrating quinoa

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on March 5, 2013

Quinoa, the Andean “superfood” known by the Incas as the “mother of all grains”, is getting a promotional boost from the United Nations, which has declared 2013 the International Year of Quinoa.

The spotlight is overdue for this long-neglected crop, for centuries grown almost exclusively by indigenous communities in the Andean highlands but now being heralded by foodies and nutrition-conscious consumers around the world.

Why? Because quinoa packs a potent nutritional punch. In fact, it’s so rich in nutrients that NASA chose to include it in astronauts’ diets. Rich in protein and minerals, Quinoa is the only plant containing a complete range of amino acids. It’s also gluten free. What’s more, it is able to adapt to different ecological conditions and climates. Resistant to drought, poor soils and high salinity, it can be grown from sea level to an altitude of four thousand meters and can withstand extreme temperatures.

At the recent ceremony to kick off the International Year at UN Headquarters in New York, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon emphasized quinoa’s potential to contribute significantly to the “Zero Hunger Challenge” he launched in June 2012, while helping counter the effects of a warming planet.

New ally in hunger fight

FAO head José Graziano da Silva declared quinoa “a new ally in the fight against hunger and food insecurity” and noted that the crop was already showing potential in Kenya and Mali and could also be developed in other arid regions of the world.

The effort to promote quinoa is part of a broader FAO strategy to promote traditional or forgotten crops as a means to combat hunger and promote healthy eating.

“The International Year of Quinoa will serve not only to stimulate the development of the crop worldwide, but also as recognition that the challenges of the modern world can be confronted by calling on the accumulated knowledge of our ancestors and the small family farmers who currently are the major producers of the crop,” said Graziano da Silva.

FAO hopes that the yearlong series of cultural, artistic and academic activities, as well as scientific research, will contribute to the well-being of thousands of smallholder farmers and to consumers worldwide.

Gift of the Andes

Quinoa was of great nutritional importance to pre-Colombian Andean civilizations, second only to the potato. Traditionally, quinoa grains are roasted and then made into flour for bread. It can also be cooked, added to soups, used as a cereal, as pasta and even fermented into beer or chicha, the traditional drink of the Andes.

Quinoa production now extends beyond the Andean region and – besides Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Chile, Colombia and Argentina – it is also produced in the United States, Canada, France, the United Kingdom, Sweden, Denmark, Italy, Kenya and India.

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Mountains and climate change

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on December 11, 2012

Today is International Mountain Day. Did you know that mountains are extremely vulnerable to climate change? Find out more in this animated video:

New study on climate change impacts on tropical agriculture

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on August 2, 2012

Photo: N. Palmer (CIAT)A new study just out from the CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security shows that there are some crucial gaps in our understanding of the likely impacts of climate change on many key food staples and natural resources in developing countries.

The study, “Impacts of climate change on the agricultural and aquatic systems and natural resources within the CGIAR’s mandate”, contains summaries for 22 commodities and for agroforestry, forests and water.  These summaries, written by CGIAR scientists, outline the importance of each commodity for food and nutrition security, its biological vulnerability to climate change, and the likely socio-economic vulnerability of the people affected.

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New expert panel reports

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on July 18, 2012

Credit  ©FAO/Giulio NapolitanoThe Committee on World Food Security, the UN forum for reviewing and following up on policies concerning world food security, has just issued two reports prepared by its High-Level Panel of Experts.

Food security and climate change urges every country to develop its own strategy to manage climate change and risks. The coping capacity of the poor will have to be strengthened, since poor nations and the poor in all countries will be the first and hardest hit by adverse changes in climate, the report says. Action will be needed to safeguard the lives and livelihoods of coastal communities. Countries will also have to be prepared, where necessary, to resettle “climate refugees”.

The report says that food production has to be insulated to the extent possible from climate change impacts, especially in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia, which are among the most vulnerable regions to changes in temperature and precipitation and also the regions with the highest rates of malnutrition.

Social protection for food security recommends that all countries design and implement a comprehensive legally empowered social protection system to provide every citizen an opportunity for a productive and healthy life. It notes that whereas families and communities used to look after their most vulnerable members, now governments are assuming the responsibility for providing appropriate social protection measures to prevent poverty-induced hunger.

At the global level, the report recommends that the Committee on World Food Security help in bringing out an Annual Social Protection Monitor, which would provide data on the steps taken in different countries to achieve the goal of sustainable food security through a rights and life-cycle approach to entitlements. Indicators to measure the impact of social safety net programmes should include a gender audit as well, the report says.

Read more: Food security and climate change | Social protection for food security

Hungry Planet 16: RIO+20 Special Report

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on June 4, 2012

In the latest episode of Hungry Planet, researchers measure carbon levels stored within Tanzania’s forests; Brazilian farmers turn to sustainable agriculture to rehabilitate the natural environment; and Mali refugees arrive at the M’bera refugee camp in Mauritania in search of food and safety.

The Hungry Planet series showcases how the three UN food agencies – FAO, the International Fund for Agricultural Development and the World Food Programme – are working to address some of the world’s most pressing challenges in their joint battle against chronic hunger.

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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Achieving food security in a changing climate

Submitted by Rachel Friedman on April 3, 2012

The Commission on Sustainable Agriculture and Climate Change, an initiative of the CGIAR Research Program on Climate Change, Agriculture and Food Security, released its final report at the Planet Under Pressure conference in London last week. In addition to the key policy recommendations it presented in the report, the Commission also release an animated film documenting the major challenges for food security in the face of climate changes.

North American forestry outlook

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on March 28, 2012

Photo courtesy of USDA Forest ServiceThe United States and Canada have experienced large changes in their forest sectors over the past 50 years. A new study just launched by FAO and the UN Economic Commission for Europe looks at these changes and offers projections for the forest sector in the two countries to 2030.

The North American Forest Sector Outlook concludes that over the coming decades North American forests are expected to meet increasing and sometimes conflicting environmental, social and economic demands: issues that warrant policymakers’ attention.

Projections were modeled on three Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) scenarios: two scenarios assuming the rapid growth of wood-based energy, and one scenario without this assumption. The model, under the IPCC scenarios, accounted for trends in population, income and land use along with emerging technology and predicted changes to consumption patterns for wood products and bioenergy.

Markets for wood products, mainly destined for the construction sector in North America, are projected to recover by 2015 under all three scenarios examined. Projections suggest that, in spite of declining use of paper for media, global demand for other paper and paperboard for packaging and miscellaneous uses will remain strong.

The study is a companion to the European Forest Sector Outlook Study II launched in September 2011. Read more>>

Rural women’s voices: Rose Cunningham Kain

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on March 26, 2012

Rose Cunningham Kain is Executive Director of Wangki Tangni, a women’s community development organization run by and for indigenous peoples on Nicaragua’s Atlantic coast.

A panelist at FAO’s side event, “Unleashing rural women’s voice to end hunger and poverty” during the Committee on the Status of Women in New York earlier this month, Rose provided her perspective on the needs of rural women:

Climate-smart agriculture and green growth – can ICT help?

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on March 5, 2012

©FAO/Hoang Dinh NamThe World Bank, FAO and the e-Agriculture community invite you to explore how information and communication technologies (ICT) can support “green growth” and climate-smart agriculture.

This is the second in a series of discussions following the publication of the World Bank’s “ICT in Agriculture” Sourcebook, responding to the growing demand for knowledge on how to use ICTs to improve agricultural productivity and raise smallholder incomes.

The current forum, which runs from 5-16 March, will look at how ICTs are being used to make farming practices more environmentally sustainable.

Do you have experiences to share on how ICTs are helping improve soil management and land use planning? Or examples of how mobile phones are being used to get climate-smart agriculture information or data to farmers?

Join the discussion.



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