FAO in North America

New report on North Korean food security

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on November 12, 2012

A new FAO/WFP report estimates that while there has been an increase in staple food production in the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea for the second year running, the country continues to face an ongoing struggle with undernutrition and a lack of vital protein and fat in the diet, especially for an estimated 2.8 million vulnerable people.

The assessment team visited all nine agricultural provinces in late September/early October, around the main annual cereal harvest.

Of particular concern to the mission was a 30 per cent decline in soybean production, as well as the limited quantity of vegetables available, perpetuating a chronic lack of key proteins, oils, fats, vitamins and micronutrients in most diets. Soybean production was the primary victim of a prolonged dry spell in the first half of the 2012 main agricultural season. The impact of the dry spell on the maize harvest was largely mitigated by irrigation, as people were mobilized on a huge scale to water crops by hand.

“The country needs to produce more protein-rich foods like soybean and fish and to put more effort into growing two crops a year so a more varied diet is available for everyone,” said Kisan Gunjal, FAO economist and co-leader of the mission.

Read more>>

Mixed news on hunger

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on October 9, 2012

©FAO/Asim Hafeez Almost 870 million people, or one in eight, were suffering from chronic undernourishment in 2010-2012, according to the new UN hunger report released today.

The State of Food Insecurity in the World 2012 (SOFI) presents better estimates of chronic undernourishment based on an improved methodology and data for the last two decades.

The vast majority of the hungry, 852 million, live in developing countries — around 15 percent of their population — while 16 million people are undernourished in developed countries.

The global number of hungry people declined by 132 million between 1990-92 and 2010-12, or from 18.6 percent to 12.5 percent of the world’s population, and from 23.2 percent to 14.9 percent in developing countries – putting the Millennium Development Goal target of reducing the proportion of people who suffer from hunger by half by 2015 within reach if adequate, appropriate actions are taken.

The number of hungry declined more sharply between 1990 and 2007 than previously believed. Since 2007-2008, however, global progress in reducing hunger has slowed and leveled off, according to the report.

Speaking at the launch of the report today in Rome, FAO Director-General José Graziano da Silva stressed that while the new numbers showed progress over the past 20 years:

“The only acceptable number for hunger is zero.”

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Global food prices up slightly, cereal production forecast down

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on October 4, 2012

The FAO Food Price Index rose slightly in September 2012, up 1.4 percent, or 3 points, from its level in August. The rise reflected strengthening dairy and meat prices and more contained increases for cereals. Prices of sugar and oils, on the other hand, fell.

Meanwhile, FAO’s latest forecasts confirm a decline in global cereal production this year from the record registered in 2011. But record harvests are expected in low-income food-deficit countries.

World cereal production in 2012 is now forecast at 2 286 million tonnes, slightly down from the  2 295 million tonnes estimated in September, according to the new issue of FAO’s quarterly Crop Prospects and Food Situation report also published today.

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Macho fruit flies to the rescue

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on September 4, 2012

Photo by Jack DykingaThe Mexican fruit fly, Anastrepha ludens, is considered a significant quarantine pest that could cause billions of dollars in losses to citrus, peach, pears, avocado and other crops were it to move into the United States from Mexico.

But Mexico, in cooperation with the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, has an aggressive programme in place to counter the threat posed by the pest and help maintain a “no-fly zone”.

Mexico uses the sterile insect technique, which involves sterilizing millions of male fruit flies with irradiation and releasing them en masse to mate with wild female flies. Such mating results in nonviable eggs that fail to hatch. Over time, repeated releases of sterile male flies cause the targeted pest population to collapse, diminishing or eliminating the need for insecticide spraying.

But the irradiation used to sterilize the flies weakens them, making it difficult for them to outcompete wild-type males for female mates.

Now, USDA’s Agricultural Research Service scientists and their collaborators have devised a hormone therapy for making sterile flies “more macho,” improving their chances of mating with female flies before their wild rivals do. Peter Teal, leader of the agency’s Chemistry Research Unit at Gainesville, Florida, developed the hormone treatment in conjunction with a team of scientists from Mexico, Argentina and Austria.

The team’s treatment uses a hormone analogue called methoprene to speed the rate at which sterile male flies reach sexual maturity while kept in specialized holding facilities. In studies, methoprene-treated flies were ready for release four days sooner than non-treated flies. And thanks to a dietary supplement of hydrolyzed protein, the sterile flies, once released, were also stronger and more successful at competing for mates.

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New Global Food Security Index

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on July 11, 2012

A new global food security index, released yesterday by the Economist Intelligence Unit and commissioned by DuPont, examines the drivers of food security in 105 countries, analyzing 25 indicators in the areas of affordability, availability, and quality and safety.

Building upon existing food security research from FAO, the International Food Policy Research Institute and others, the index considers the nutritional value and safety of food along with supply and availability issues.

It will also feature ongoing adjustment for changes in food prices and other macroeconomic factors, said Leo Abruzzese, Global Forecasting Director of the Economist Intelligence Unit, at the launch event in Washington.

Wealthy countries (surprise, surprise) top the index, led by the US, Denmark, Norway and France, but the findings also show that people in the countries with the most food do not have diets that are particularly rich in micronutrients. Rich nations do especially poorly in iron content from vegetables relative to poorer countries, according to the index.

By looking at the drivers of food security, the index creators hope it will foster dialogue about practical solutions to food insecurity.

“We share a common goal, but we don’t have a common language,” said Ellen Kullman, chief executive officer of Du Pont, explaining why the company had sponsored the project. “What gets measured, gets done,” she added.

The Washington event featured a lively discussion that included USAID Administrator Rajiv Shah; Howard Buffett, retired US General Barry McCaffrey; Ritu Sharma, President of Women Thrive Worldwide; and Dr. Patrick Westhoff, Director of the Food and Agricultural Policy Research Institute at the University of Missouri-Columbia.

OECD and FAO publish new Agricultural Outlook

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on July 11, 2012

While international agricultural commodity markets appear to have calmed after record highs last year, food commodity prices are anticipated to remain on a higher plateau over the next decade, underpinned by firm demand but a slowing growth in global production, according to the latest OECD-FAO Agricultural Outlook.

Population growth, higher per capita incomes, urban migration and changing diets in developing countries, as well as rising requirements for biofuel feedstocks, are underpinning demand pressures. At the same time, agricultural output by traditional exporting developed countries has been slow to respond to higher prices in the last decade, the report says.

The report was launched at a press conference at FAO Headquarters in Rome with OECD Secretary-General Angel Gurría and FAO Director-General José Graziano da Silva.

Read more or watch the press conference webcast.

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.

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>>

What rural women can do

Submitted by Teresa Buerkle on March 19, 2012

A guest blog post by FAO Deputy Director-General for Knowledge Ann Tutwiler

Photo: ©FAO/A.Proto

When Alice Kachere, a small farmer from Malawi, lost her husband, she also lost her land, her home, and the means of providing for her three young children – all due to a lack of joint tenancy and land inheritance rights.

For Cesarie Kantarama from Rwanda, access to credit and markets is the missing link to improving incomes for her and other small producers. Women farmers working their small plots can’t compete with high-quality less-expensive imports, she says, and live a precarious existence while middlemen benefit from the fruits of their labor.

Indian farmer Sarala Gopalan says that women do most of the dirty agricultural work in her community, but only men, as the landholders, are considered farmers. For Sarala, tools that reduce women’s drudgery, help them work more efficiently and free up their time for more rewarding and remunerative activities will ensure that communities like hers do not waste half their human potential.

I met Alice, Cesarie and Sarala during the UN Commission on the Status of Women’s recent meeting in New York. For the first time in the Commission’s 56 years, rural women were front and center, gathering from around the world to discuss the real challenges they face and to share ideas for overcoming them.

Rural women play a critical role in the development and well-being of their communities, contributing to agriculture and rural enterprises that fuel local and global economies. Yet their economic potential is squandered due to the gender gap in access to productive resources and opportunities.

According to FAO’s most recent State of Food and Agriculture report, just giving women the same access as men to modern seeds, fertilizer and tools could increase production on women’s farms in developing countries by 20 to 30 percent – enough to feed up to 150 million more of the world’s hungry people.

Women make up, on average, 43 percent of the agricultural labour force in developing countries. But less than 20 percent of agricultural landholders worldwide are women due to legal and cultural constraints in land inheritance, ownership and use. Women represent less than 5 percent of all agricultural landholders in North Africa and West Asia, while across sub-Saharan Africa, they make up on average 15 percent.

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 that production will need to come from developing countries.

But producing more food is not enough, if poor people do not have the means to buy it. More than 90 percent of the hunger in the world is due, not to emergencies like drought or natural disaster, but to poverty.

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 – must play a much more effective role.

For Alice Kachere, things are looking better. She now farms one hectare and has begun renting some land to expand her farm thanks to a tenfold increase in her maize yields due to better planting techniques, hybrid seeds, fertilizer and organic manure – farming practices she learned through membership in the National Smallholder Farmers’ Association of Malawi. She regrets that microcredit in her community is only for men and dreams about moving beyond crop production, about starting a business.

Several years ago while visiting a rural women’s project, I , like Sarala, remarked on the lost opportunity of a female labour force mired in drudgery. (Collectively, women from sub-Saharan Africa spend an astounding 40 billion hours a year simply collecting water!)

“What else would women do?” my (male) host said.

Rural women are active economic agents who could unleash major advancements in hunger and poverty eradication if they were able to participate equally with men in the agricultural economy. They aren’t a problem to be solved. They’re a solution.

Give women like Alice, Cesarie and Sarala access to land and credit, modern seeds and tools, information and a voice in decision-making, and just watch what they will do.

………………………………………………………

Alice Kachere shared her story in an interview with UN Radio. Listen here.

While in New York, we talked to a number of rural women about their experiences and insights. We’ll be posting videos of these conversations throughout the month of March in celebration of Women’s History Month. Stay tuned.



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