FAO sets its eyes firmly on Zero Hunger, as it celebrates 70th anniversary,
Improving nutrition, shifting to
sustainable food systems will be key to reaching new global goals –
FAO DG at celebration of agency’s birth in Quebec City
Ensuring better nutrition for all and
transforming the world’s food systems to ensure their future
sustainability represent the two greatest challenges facing FAO as it
renews its mission to free the world from hunger and malnutrition,
the UN agency's Director-General, José Graziano da Silva, said
today.
At a ceremony commemorating the 70th
anniversary of FAO's founding in Quebec City, organized by the Quebec
government, Graziano da Silva said: “Our responsibility is growing
day by day, and today our mission and mandate remain more relevant
than ever,” referring to the new global goal of ending hunger by
2030 adopted by the international community in September.
“And FAO has proven its ability to
adapt to a changing world and respond to new challenges,” he added.
The FAO Director-General began his
speech by expressing sadness and shock at the recent terrorist
attacks that clouded the ceremony on Saturday: “They took place in
Paris and Beirut, but they hit all of us around the world,” he
said, “regardless of where we are and of whom we are. My
solidarity goes to the victims and their families,” he added before
turning to the topic of the event.
Vision for a future without hunger
Speaking at the Chateau de Frontenac on
the banks of the Saint Lawrence River where heads of states gathered
in 1945 for the first FAO Conference and pledged to unshackle
humanity from hunger, Graziano da Silva praised the vision of the
agency's founders.
“Their vision has allowed for
agriculture to be considered as the key to human development,” he
said, “and for the world to realize that the international
community is able to address the problem of hunger and malnutrition
globally.”
Attending the ceremony, the Prime
Minister of Quebec, Philippe Couillard, said: “The challenge of
creating food security for all in the 21st century is more relevant
than ever, as climate change affects both the areas and the ways of
producing food. I wish FAO every success in the achievement of its
development objectives -- its expertise is key to global agricultural
resilience in response to climate change,” he added.
Achievements
That a world with Zero Hunger is not
just a dream but something than can be realized is evinced by a
number of significant achievements made over the past 70 years,
Graziano da Silva said.
While the world's population tripled
over that period, food availability per person rose some 40 percent,
he noted, adding that since 1990, 73 out of 129 countries that FAO
monitors have halved the proportion of hungry people in their
populations.
Another milestone was the global
eradication in 2010 of Rinderpest -- a lethal cattle plague that for
centuries decimated herds and jeopardized the livelihoods farmers
worldwide -- following a decades-long campaign by FAO and partners.
Similar ongoing efforts have seen great strides in the containment of
desert locusts, an age-old threat to crops and food security.
In the realm of fisheries, Graziano da
Silva pointed to the FAO Code of Conduct for Responsible Fisheries as
a major achievement with lasting global effects. From responsible
fishing practices to improvements in safety, labelling and trade, the
Code covers virtually all aspects of the fishing industry and has
guided government policies on all continents to the point where most
countries today have fisheries policies and legislation compatible
with the Code.
FAO has also advanced global food
safety in partnership with the UN's World Health Organization via the
Codex Alimentarius, which provides standards and guiding principles
for food producers and retailers to ensure the safety, quality and
fairness of international food trade, said the FAO Director-General.
He also highlighted the FAO-brokered
International Treaty on Plant Genetic Resources, which is playing an
important role in ensuring the preservation and sustainable use of
seeds of food crops and their wild relatives, harnessing their
genetic diversity for the food security of future generations.
Challenges remain
But regardless of these and many other
successes, “We all know, the fight is not over yet,” the FAO
Director-General said, emphasizing that around 800 million people all
over the world still suffer from hunger today.
“We are faced by many crucial
challenges, and the greatest are two,” he said.
“First, we must quickly translate
increases in food availability into better nutrition for all. Second,
we must work faster to alter food production and consumption and
create truly sustainable food systems,” according to Graziano da
Silva. He underlined that solving these challenges is made more
difficult by conflicts, disasters and financial shocks.
The dream expressed by FAO’s first
Director-General, the Nobel-prize-winning nutritionist Sir John Boyd
Orr, that “every man, woman and child should have the food he needs
to be really healthy” lives on in the new global goal to wholly
eradicate hunger by 2030, Graziano da Silva said.
“And it is my dream to celebrate this
success at FAO’s 85th birthday -- a world without hunger, without
children stunted or malnourished, a world where all are entitled to
adequate food and can produce food sustainable,” he added.
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