Food issues in the spotlight
by Martin Khor
The recent Rio+20 Summit upheld the right of all people to food, and
the need to support small farmers and promote ecologically-sound
agriculture.
Food security and sustainable agriculture was one of the most
important topics at the recent Rio+20 Summit, for the simple reason that
all of us have to eat to survive, and agriculture has to be ecologically
sustainable for production to continue into the future.While the
negotiators were busily hammering out a quite satisfactory text on this
topic in a small room, a more interesting discussion was taking place on
Food and Nutrition Security in the huge plenary hall sitting 2,000
people.
I was one of the 10 panellists in this debate, part of the seven
Sustainable Development Dialogues that were organised by the Brazilian
government as part of the official summit program.Other topics in the
dialogue series included the global financial crisis, unemployment,
energy, oceans, cities, forests and, production and consumption
patterns.
In the food dialogue, the panellists included former prime minister
of Mozambique Luisa Dias Diogo, former UN Human Rights Commissioner Mary
Robinson, Indian ecologist Vandana Shiva, Slow Food Movement founder
Carlo Petrini, World Economic Forum vice-president Josette Sheeran,
Brazilian academic Renato Maluf and several representatives of farmers'
organisations.
Before the dialogue, there was a month-long Internet-based
interactive discussion open to all, and the thousands that took part
proposed solutions to the food problem.
The panel was to discuss which proposals were most important, and
forward them to the heads of states meeting a few days later.
There was significant agreement among the panellists that small
farmers in developing countries, and especially women, were the key to
both the present and the future of agriculture.
Empowering small farmers through access to land, credit, subsidies,
storage facilities and transport were thus essential.
The expansion of national budgets and aid allocation to small-scale
agriculture is thus a priority, as is the strengthening of farmers'
organisations that can fight for their interests.
Many panellists stressed the need for ecological farming methods.
The huge stress on chemical-based water-intensive agriculture had
been a mistake because of its impact on the environment, including it
being a main cause of climate change, and the dependence of small
farmers to purchase fertilisers, pesticides and seeds.
The resulting household debt had led to over 200,000 farmer suicides
in India, we were reminded by Shiva. Nor is genetic engineering a
solution, due to food safety and environmental problems as well as
taking seeds out of the control of farmers.
Thus, the agro-ecology approach should be given the chance it never
had until now, through big support for research, extension and major
support by international agencies, to show that sustainable agriculture
is not only good for the environment but is productive enough to feed
the world.
A rights-based approach was advocated by many, especially Robinson
who stressed that food and nutrition security are human rights.
Thus, governments should ensure that citizens have access to food.
The Brazilian "zero hunger" policy initiated by former president Lula
de Silva, in which the state transferred funds to poor families, was
held up as a model, as was the new food security Bill in India. Several
panellists identified the way food has become part of the global
financial system as a new crisis-laden problem.
Petrini said food used to be sacred and the main thing in life, but
it has become a mere product in the commodity and financial market,
causing large swings in prices.
The slow food movement founder said that more energy was now used to
produce food than was the energy contained in the food. A new paradigm
is needed to address the big food crisis, including reducing food waste,
stopping land grabs in Africa, combatting rich country subsidies that
undercut poor farmers' markets, fighting food speculation as well as the
profit-centred push for genetically modified organisms that damage small
communities.
My own focus was on how the global trading system was still allowing
massive distortions in which rich countries subsidised agriculture by
almost US$400bil a year and sold subsidised foods to poor countries at
artificially low prices, thus damaging the livelihoods of small farmers.
The IMF and World Bank imposed a policy package on African countries
that got them to remove subsidies and support for farmers while cutting
their tariffs to 10 p.c.-20 p.c., thus opening the road to surges of
food imports and converting poor countries from being net exporters to
net importers of food.
This trend may even worsen if North-South free trade agreements (for
example between Europe and Africa) result in zero agricultural tariffs
in developing countries while not addressing agricultural subsidies of
developed countries.
Hopefully, the relative prominence in Rio+20 given to food security,
the right to food, sustainable agriculture, and the interests of small
farmers, will give a boost to the movements and policies that promote
these goals.
- Third World Network Features
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