Much more investment needed to reverse rise in hunger – FAO DG
Food and Agriculture Organization
(FAO), a specialized agency of the United Nations (UN) that leads international
efforts to defeat hunger, has raised the alarm that the recent increase in the
number of hungry people in the world requires immediate action to reverse the
situation.
FAO Director-General José
Graziano da Silva who said this while addressing members of the FAO Council
today noted that the latest hunger figure - 815 million people - marked the
first increase after more than a decade of steady decline. Obesity and
overweight are also growing, in developed and developing countries, posing
another cost of current food systems, he added.
FAO Director-General José Graziano da Silva addressing the Council.
Photo: ©FAO/Giuseppe Carotenuto |
"The most important thing to do now is to build the resilience of poor people to face the impacts of conflicts and climate change," making sure that humanitarian assistance is combined with development actions to chart a course towards the eradication of hunger by 2030, he said.
"This basically means new
investments - I would say much more investments - from the public but also the
private sector," Graziano da Silva said.
The year ahead
Graziano da Silva outlined major
events in 2018, including high-level international symposia on agroecology, on
Globally Important Agricultural Heritage Systems, a third on innovation for
smallholder and family farmers that is also in the works, and plans to launch
an International Platform for Biodiversity.
Those initiatives are designed
"to support countries to put in place sustainable agricultural practices
that combine food production, ecosystem services and climate-change resilience
at the same time," Graziano da Silva said.
Key opportunities "to put
the fight against hunger back on track" come early in the year, at the
African Union summit in Ethiopia and at FAO's regional conferences, including
the first one to be held in Sudan.
During 2018, FAO will also act as
co-chair of the Global Migration Group, comprised of 22 United Nations agencies
and mandated to help draft - by the end of 2018 - a Global Compact on Safe,
Regularly and Orderly Migration agreement.
As the Council reviews budgetary
matters, Graziano da Silva also noted FAO's efforts to boost its focus and
effectiveness through the development of five Strategic Programme teams as well
as other institutional measures aimed at decentralization, at increased use of
South-South and triangular cooperation and streamlining the Organization's
country office network to assure greater flexibility in the use of budgeted
resources.
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