G20 agriculture ministers commit to better ensure sustainable food systems
After a two-day summit in central Florence, Italy, the
ministers approved a final statement made of 21 points, mostly focused on
"identifying and overcoming the major hurdles to meeting the SDGs
(Sustainable Development Goals provided by the 2030 Agenda)."
"We recognize the need to identify paths for
sustainable and resilient food systems and to find appropriate institutional,
collaborative, and financial frameworks for their implementation, to overcome
short and long-term challenges," they stated.
The G20 also stressed their commitment to "take
urgent actions to address the causes and impacts of climate change", while
protecting and restoring ecosystems and their biodiversity.
Italy holds the G20 rotating presidency this year. At the
final press conference after the summit, Italian Agriculture Minister Stefano
Patuanelli urged all the group's members to pursue policies able to
"permanently reverse the course", regardless if they were unpopular
in the short term, or would not produce immediate benefits.
"Now (after Florence's commitments), the next
engagement is set in Indonesia next year; if we do nothing in the meantime, the
planet will not be waiting for us," Patuanelli said.
Taking the role from Italy next year, Indonesia will host
the next G20 summit in Bali.
In the first day of the Florence meeting, UN Food and
Agriculture Organization (FAO) Director-General Qu Dongyu as well launched an
appeal for the G20 countries to step up their efforts in addressing the
long-term effects of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Qu reiterated that agri-food systems were "key to
reducing inequalities, especially in rural areas."
Qu praised the G20's role in mitigating the pandemic's
impact on the sector over the past 18 months. But he also pointed out that many
challenges would persist.
He said the pandemic has "expanded existing
inequalities", citing the International Monetary Fund's estimation that
the per capita income loss for emerging and developing countries has been two
and a half times the proportion of those in advanced economies.
The pandemic has also increased food insecurity, Qu said,
citing the FAO's assessment that food insecurity has risen from 8.4 percent to
around 9.9 percent of the world's population.
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