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FAO welcomes G20 commitment on building sustainable food systems and reducing food waste

Posted: 8 May 2015 | Victoria White | 1 comment

FAO’s José Graziano da Silva today welcomed a commitment by the G20 agriculture ministers to meet global food security and nutrition needs…

The Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations (FAO) Director-General José Graziano da Silva today welcomed a commitment by the G20 agriculture ministers to meet global food security and nutrition needs by building food systems that use natural resources more efficiently, are economically sound and socially more inclusive, and help combat climate change.

g20-food-waste

G20 agriculture ministers noted “with great concern the significant extent of food loss and waste throughout food value chains”.

Graziano da Silva, addressing the ministers at a meeting in Istanbul, also praised specific initiatives announced by the G20 to reduce food loss and waste, including a new platform aimed at strengthening information sharing to help curb food loss and waste in both the G20 members and low-income countries.

“FAO is ready to work with our partners to establish this platform. I am confident it will give a concrete contribution to sustainably increasing food security and nutrition,” the FAO Director-General told the G20 agriculture ministers.

G20 concerned over food loss and waste

In a communiqué adopted at the meeting, the G20 agriculture ministers noted “with great concern the significant extent of food loss and waste throughout food value chains” describing it as “a global problem of enormous economic, environmental and societal significance”.

It is estimated that one-third of food produced for human consumption is lost or wasted globally, which amounts to about 1.3 billion tonnes per year. Food is lost when it is spilled or spoilt before it reaches its final product or retail stage, and it is wasted when it is not consumed because it is left to spoil or discarded by retailers or consumers.

To feed a world population of nine billion in 2050, the global food supply will need to increase by 60%

The G20 agriculture ministers discussed how to meet the food security and nutrition needs for a world population expected to top nine billion by 2050. FAO estimates that to feed this growing population, global food supply will need to increase by 60%.

The ministers cited the need for sustainable and resilient food systems – from production, through food processing, distribution, retailing and consumption. These would serve to expand food supplies and create decent work in rural areas, especially for small-scale family farmers, women and young people.

They also noted that among other things, sustainable food systems should help address climate change.

Additionally, the ministers agreed to strengthen the Agricultural Market Information System (AMIS) – a G20 initiative of which the secretariat is housed in FAO, aimed at enhancing food market transparency and encouraging coordination of policy action in response to market uncertainty.

“While AMIS has been a particularly successful initiative, we dedicate ourselves to deeper and stronger collaboration in AMIS to materially improve global data and market transparency by disclosing regular, reliable, accurate, timely and comparable data,” the agriculture ministers said.

One response to “FAO welcomes G20 commitment on building sustainable food systems and reducing food waste”

  1. Rod Averbuch says:

    Food waste is a lose-lose situation for the environment, the struggling families in today’s tough economy and for the food retailers.
    The new open GS1 DataBar barcode standard enables new food waste reduction applications that offer relevant, environmentally friendly and personalized fresh food deals.
    An example of such an application is the “End Grocery Waste” App. This GS1 DataBar based application encourages efficient consumer shopping behavior that makes fresh food affordable for all families, maximizes grocery retailer revenue, and effectively reduces the global carbon footprint.

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