10.F. Round table: Transforming food and agricultural systems and addressing food insecurity in Europe

2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (Supplement_5) ◽  
Author(s):  

Abstract This roundtable will follow up from the Workshop on Planetary Healthy Diets for All and explore practical solutions to tie increased sustainability of food systems to reductions in food insecurity in Europe. There is a disconnect between the level of scientific evidence supporting the need for action on food and agricultural systems and the willingness to uptake it at the national and local level. Countries' reluctance to implement evidence-based policy options often results from the perception that the data and solutions do not reflect their national realities. At the same time, there is a rising trend in food insecurity in Europe. Part of it is driven by the food system itself and part of it by social determinants that exacerbate the effects of elements such as food prices or the availability of affordable healthy foods. In terms of the current response to food insecurity in Europe, there is enough evidence that it is inadequate. The most notable example of inadequacy are food banks: they are unsustainable and perpetuate deficiencies of the foods system, such as waste. At the same time, food banks contribute to widening health inequities because they are stigmatizing, and the quality and reliability of the food they offer exacerbates health problems. They also mask failures of social protection and of food policy to protect those at the bottom. Yet, they are proliferating all around Europe. The WHO European Regional Office for Europe will share practical steps that it is taking to assist policy makers at national level to bridge evidence and action. WHO will present a novel on-line, readily accessible tool that public health officials from Member States can use to guide policy decisions. This tool uses a food systems model considering food consumption, food production, environmental impacts and health impacts to identify practical solutions for countries to create food systems that both have a lower impact on the climate and promote healthier diets. The roundtable will also highlight the transformative example of Copenhagen's public food procurement strategy, which, starting from a target on organic food in public canteens, has evolved into a comprehensive approach to achieve tasty, healthy, sustainable meals with social added value and without increasing procurement costs. In sum, against the backdrop of both nutritional and environmental challenges to food systems in Europe, participants at the roundtable will share barriers and opportunities to the uptake of evidence-based solutions to transform food systems and tackle food insecurity at the national and local levels, including in the context of the ongoing reform of the EU's Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) and the new 'Farm to Fork' Strategy for sustainable food. This discussion will allow participants to share their insights and enrich each other's understanding of the issues at stake and the tools and opportunities on offer to support, in an action-oriented way, a sustainable food systems transition that overcomes food insecurity. Key messages Global reference diets need application on a national and subnational level. Food insecurity, can be major barrier to the uptake of healthy diets and must be tackled as such. The new data platform and training materials will empower policymakers within countries to develop and introduce national level initiatives, such as sustainable and healthy public procurement.

2020 ◽  
Vol 30 (Supplement_5) ◽  
Author(s):  
D W Patterson ◽  
K Buse ◽  
R Magnusson ◽  
B C A Toebes

Abstract Issue Malnutrition in all its forms poses daunting challenges to global health and development. The agriculture sector is a significant contributor to global warming. COVID-19 has pushed many people into poverty, including food poverty. A radical rethink of business models, food systems, civil society involvement, and national and international governance is required to address the interlinked crises of COVID-19, obesity, undernutrition, and climate change. International human rights law, institutions and mechanisms provide important opportunities for norm setting, advocacy and accountability. Yet these pathways are under-utilised by both governments and civil society. Description The global AIDS response demonstrated the power of a human rights-based approach. United Nations' HIV/AIDS and Human Rights Guidelines greatly influenced the global consensus for effective, evidence-based approaches. The Guidelines also informed resolutions of the UN General Assembly and its Human Rights Council, contributing to more affordable medicines, an unprecedented increase in people on treatment, less stigmatising health services, the empowerment of marginalised groups, and the institutionalisation of norms, including “no one left behind.” Human rights-based approaches have also been successfully utilised in tobacco control. Results In 2019, 180 experts from 38 countries published an open call on WHO and the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) to initiate an inclusive process to develop guidelines on human rights, healthy diets and sustainable food systems. Most signatories were from the health and development sectors, demonstrating the increasingly broad interest in using human rights mechanisms to address global health challenges. Lessons Opportunities exist to transform food systems and create healthier food environments and a healthier planet by clarifying existing international obligations to progressively realise the right to food and the right to health. Key messages Market forces, alone, are failing to deliver healthy diets and sustainable food systems. International legal frameworks and accountability mechanisms provide opportunities for engagement and action. Human rights guidelines can help mobilize multisectoral action, strengthen State and private sector accountability, and deepen community engagement in the urgent task of achieving Agenda 2030.


Author(s):  
Sarah Edore Edewor ◽  
Agatha Osivweneta Ogbe

Over the past decades, the food systems in developing countries have transformed rapidly. However, the rise in social inequalities has negatively affected, the vulnerable groups as the benefits associated with these transformations are still skewed. This chapter examined the role of gender inclusiveness in promoting sustainable food systems. Employment trends revealed that agricultural employment was higher among males. Five asymmetries (assets, access to agricultural market, access to technology, resilience and risks, and decision making) were identified as limitations to sustainable food systems stemming from the gender differentiated roles. The gender action learning system methodology was adopted using strategies such as empowering men and women through community action learning during catalyst workshops, gender mainstreaming for innovation and institutional change at organizational level, and through advocacy network for policy improvement at the national level. The study concluded that gender inclusion played a crucial role in achieving sustainable food systems.


The Lancet ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 394 (10194) ◽  
pp. 214-215 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward Archer ◽  
Carl J Lavie

2010 ◽  
Vol 32 (4) ◽  
pp. 24-28 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ann Kingsolver ◽  
Sasikumar Balasundaram ◽  
Vijayakumar Sugumaran ◽  
Jennifer Engel ◽  
Timothy Gerber ◽  
...  

The 2009 research project discussed here focused on regional experiences of global food insecurity, and linked students in South Carolina and Sri Lanka to explore a more affordable and inclusive means of transnational research collaboration. In 2008, there was a remarkable increase in food insecurity associated with the global economic crisis. The Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations estimated that the number of undernourished people in the world rose from 864 million to 967 million in just that one year. USAID (2009) reported that 37 countries were experiencing food insecurity at the national level, and that food prices had risen by 43 percent in 2008 alone. Catholic Relief Services (2008) estimated that the cost of basic staples in much of the Global South had tripled in just 18 months, and that the price of daily food requirements exceeded daily wages for many. There were food riots in nearly a dozen countries because of food costs doubling or more.


2021 ◽  
Vol 258 ◽  
pp. 66-82
Author(s):  
Shouro Dasgupta ◽  
Elizabeth J. Z. Robinson

Climate change and weather shocks have multi-faceted impacts on food systems with important implications for economic policy. Combining a longitudinal household survey with high-resolution climate data, we demonstrate that both climate and weather shocks increase food insecurity; cash assistance and participation in Ethiopia’s Productive Safety Net Programme have reduced food insecurity; but food assistance has been ineffective. Importantly, households with savings, and those that stored their harvest to sell at higher prices rather than for home use, suffered less from food insecurity, yet both strategies are harder for the poorest and most food insecure households to adopt. Our paper provides micro-founded evidence needed to design policies that both improve agricultural yields in the context of a changing climate and target households’ abilities to cope with shocks that put upwards pressure on food prices.


The Lancet ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 394 (10194) ◽  
pp. 215-216 ◽  
Author(s):  
Walter Willett ◽  
Johan Rockström ◽  
Brent Loken

2021 ◽  
Vol 5 ◽  
Author(s):  
Daniel A. Mekonnen ◽  
Dare Akerele ◽  
Thom Achterbosch ◽  
Thijs de Lange ◽  
Elise F. Talsma

This study examines the cost and affordability of healthy diets in Nigeria. Using the 2015/16 and 2018/19 waves of Nigeria General Household Surveys, we find that, generally, the least-cost options to meet dietary recommendations for vegetables, dairy, and protein-rich foods are more expensive to meet than that of other food groups. Despite improvements during the survey years, the challenges of affordability of healthy diets appear more pronounced in rural than urban, among poorest household groups, and in northern than southern Nigeria. Results suggest that it will be more expensive to meet the dietary recommendation for dairy foods if priority will be given for food systems sustainability over concerns for food preferences of the households. It will however be cheaper to achieve dietary recommendations for vegetables, fruits and starchy staples even when households give more consideration to food systems sustainability than tastes and preferences in their choice of healthy foods. Relative affordability of protein-rich foods are less affected by whether (or not) tastes/preferences or food systems sustainability drives healthy food choices. Key implication is that interventions targeting on affordability of healthy diets should give greater attention to the poorest of the poor, to rural than urban, and to northern than southern Nigeria. Implications relevant for research, policy, and other actors that focus on transformation of the food systems toward achieving healthier diets in a sustainable food systems are discussed.


Author(s):  
Aleksandr A. Tkachenko

Over the past 3-4 decades, some progress has been made in the countries of North and North-East Africa, and - broader - in the Middle East, in development/transformation of agriculture and its branches related to food production. As a result, the key indicators of food production and consumption per capita have increased significantly. Moreover, the consumption growth performance was higher than the production growth performance, and that was driven by an increase in food imports. At the same time, the food insecurity remains acute in several ways. This applies to the manifestations of mass hunger in the Sahel as well as to the increased pressure on the budget due to both the significant increase in world food prices and the import volume. These and other specifics of the current state of the food insecurity in the countries of North Africa and other regions of the world, require a new vision of providing the population with food and shaping an integral approach to resolve the problem. Experts are linking this vision with the promotion of the so-called UN Initiative announced by the Secretary-General A.Guterres in the fall of 2020 and aimed at an integrated approach to resolution of the food insecurity: the development of "national food security and nutrition systems" in the countries of the world, which would include the development of mechanisms and tools necessary for a better and a comprehensive food supply to the world's population, and take into account both local and national conditions, as well as medical nutrition standards.


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