Asia-Pacific countries discuss ways of improving nutrition, lives and livelihoods in wake of global pandemic

Dhaka/Rome – Ministers and
high-level delegates from across Asia and the Pacific met today with a focus on
improving nutrition, lives and livelihoods in the wake of the global pandemic,
while taking aim at ongoing climate and severe weather-related threats, and
tackling diseases and pests that are affecting crops and livestock in the
world’s most populous region. Improved ecosystem responses in the Pacific
Islands is another key topic.

The 36th Asia
and Pacific Regional Conference (APRC),
convened by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO)
and hosted by the Government of Bangladesh, is taking place in the capital,
Dhaka.

Prime Minister of Bangladesh Sheikh Hasina highlighted her country’s
achievement of self-sufficiency for several essential foods and noted that
agriculture remains the “backbone” of the economy, providing livelihoods for 40
percent of the labour force. She appealed for “achieving food security and
nutrition in the real sense,” and she called for collaboration among countries
in the region in areas such as education, biotechnology and green investments.

The FAO Director-General, QU Dongyu, attending the regional conference in
person, acknowledged the toll the global pandemic has inflicted on lives and
livelihoods of the people of Asia and the Pacific. He noted there was a
long way to go for the region to eliminate hunger and improve nutrition,
pointing to a FAO report from last year that found 40
percent of the population were unable to afford a healthy, nutritious diet.

Reversing many years of progress, hunger in Asia and the Pacific is on the rise
again, and inequalities are increasing, particularly between rural and urban
populations, while too often women and youth are being left behind. “The
pandemic has forced us to reconsider our priorities and approaches and has
highlighted the importance of more sustainable and resilient societies, as well
as of the urgency to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals to secure food,
health, education, a healthy environment, and a decent life for all,” the
Director-General said in his Statement to Conference.

This has led to a movement to transform the region’s agrifood systems and make
them more efficient, more inclusive, more resilient and more sustainable, he
added.

The Director-General said FAO will be aiming to do this through four Regional
Priorities. They focus on transforming agrifood systems for sustainable production
and healthy diets; accelerating sustainable natural resources management for
biodiversity conservation and climate action; supporting inclusive rural
transformation for sustainable agrifood systems and equitable rural societies,
and building sustainable and resilient agrifood systems in the Pacific Small
Island Developing States (SIDS).

Scaling up digitalization
in food and agriculture sectors to transform agrifood systems

A key area of interest in this APRC is the digitalization of agriculture and
food processes that are sweeping across Asia and the Pacific, and the potential
they have for the region and the world, if scaled up further, to help transform
agrifood systems in ways that also benefit smallholder farmers. This would
support achieving the “Four Betters”, as set out in the FAO Strategic Framework
2022-31: Better production, Better nutrition, a Better environment and a Better
life for all – leaving no one behind.

FAO has been a leader in promoting digitalization and innovation in
agricultural processes – from producers, to processers, transporters, retailers
and consumers – through FAO’s 1,000 Digital Villages Initiative, as one prime
example, and the creation of a SIDS
Solutions Platform
as another.

“The 1,000 Digital Villages Initiative aims to convert villages across the
world into digital hubs to support the acceleration of rural transformation,”
Qu said, noting that the initiative has been rolled out in 15 countries across
the Asia-Pacific region and will facilitate smallholder producers’ access to
knowledge and markets, while reducing the digital gap, including the gender and
rural divides.

This “will leverage the entrepreneurial spirit of youth and women in the region
by creating an enabling environment, and supporting the development of national
e-agriculture strategies and digital tools and services. And I have high
expectations for this region because there are so many ‘champion countries’ and
you already have digital value, digital governance and digital economy in rural
areas,” the Director-General said during his statement to the conference.

The regional conference’s agenda includes several high-level segments with
ministerial roundtables.

Indeed, the conference “is a great opportunity to discuss country and regional
priorities and also pressing issues and needs in the region such as the impacts
of climate change, the COVID-19 pandemic, the state of agriculture, natural
resource management, food security and nutrition,” said Mohammad Abdur
Razzaque, MP, Bangladesh’s Minister for Agriculture and the Chairperson of
APRC36.

“The shortcomings of our global agrifood system have been laid bare. The dots
don’t connect anymore,” said Hans Hoogeveen, Independent Chairperson of the FAO
Council. “We need transformative change, and we need it now. Transformative
change via transformative actions. There are no excuses anymore for not
acting.”

“We need a broader innovation in the way we govern of our food systems,
locally, nationally and globally: what I like to refer to as ‘governance
innovation’,” said Gabriel Ferrero, Chairperson of
the Committee on World Food Security.

The FAO Director-General expressed his gratitude to the government and people
of Bangladesh for hosting APRC36 during challenging times, and for the
participation of delegates who joined the meeting both virtually and in-person
in Dhaka.

Regional structural
reforms to better serve Members

The Director-General emphasized that he has initiated institutional reforms to
give FAO’s regional and subregional offices more agility to help them deliver
on flagship initiatives and support the Organization’s Strategic
Framework 2022-2031
.

As examples of this enhanced delivery, he cited nine countries in the region
that are already participating in the Hand-in-Hand
Initiative
, which aims at increasing agricultural production in areas with
the highest rates of poverty and hunger. He also pointed to the 1,000 Digital Villages Initiative, which seeks to
reduce the digital gap faced by smallholders and rural dwellers, while the new One Country One Priority Product initiative,
focuses on products with unique qualities, and holds important opportunities
for implementation around the region, Qu said.

More actions are forthcoming, the Director-General added, as FAO develops its
regional strategy on digital innovation and completes the Regional Technical
Platform on Aquaculture, which will become a knowledge hub on the subject,
allowing countries around the world to benefit from the vast experiences
acquired in the Asia-Pacific region.

At its headquarters, FAO is also hosting a Coordination
Hub
to shepherd follow-up actions on the ground after the UN Food
Systems Summit 2021
.

While the Asia and Pacific Regional Conference is convened every two years to
seek the views and direction of the governments of FAO Member Nations in the
region, it has expanded to become more inclusive of other actors, such as civil
society organizations and the private sector, both of which participated in
#APRC36.

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