APEC Ministers Pledge to Strengthen Food Security
APEC Ministers urge the region’s economies to step up efforts to promote food security through fostering sustainable food systems, embracing technology, leveraging collaboration and trade, and strengthening rural development.
At the 5th APEC Food Security Ministerial Meeting in Puerto Varas, Chile, ministers agreed that continued cooperation is critical to reduce practices that impede food security and advance the integration of the region’s farmers and fishers into global value chains for food trade.
“(We have) this great opportunity to shape the future of our food systems, essential for our people - the ultimate reason to be here and do what we do,” said Antonio Walker, Minister of Agriculture for Chile, host economy of APEC 2019.
The Asia-Pacific region faces enormous challenges to meet the needs of its growing population, which has grown by more than 1 percent every year. Millions of rural farmers and fishers, particularly women, are dependent on food production and trade for income and survival, increasingly fraught as climate conditions change and result in hábitat degradation.
Addressing food insecurity includes taking action to protect marine environments and address illegal, unreported and unregulated fishing. Seafood consumption provides nearly 22 percent of the region’s average per capita animal protein intake. Marine debris, which includes plastic pollution, affects food security by entangling ocean wildlife in the waste.
APEC ministers also urge for more action to broaden access to finance and markets for small producers and the adoption of more technologies to improve productivity in food production.
“The introduction of new technologies in each space of agriculture and food production could lead to more resilient productivity and sustainability in the agriculture production sector, as well as in agri-food chains, with higher levels of traceability and transparency,” said Minister Walker.
Predictable and open trade regimes also foster food security. Trade underpinned by transparent and non-discriminatory rules leads to a greater flow of goods and integration of producers into markets.
“Trade policies that affect economies should be transparent and non-protective, supported by evidence-based rules and regulation,” said Salahuddin Ayub, Minister of Agriculture and Agro-based Industry for Malaysia, host economy of APEC 2020.
APEC encourages the development and implementation of integrated policies for agriculture, aquaculture and fisheries in order to improve productivity, reduce food loss and waste, and strengthen the sustainable use of natural resources.
APEC ministers welcomed two new important roadmaps for the forum, one to address marine debris and the other to combat illegal, underreported and unregulated fishing, and agreed to submit both to the APEC Leaders Meeting to be held in Santiago in November 2019.
The APEC Food Security Ministerial Meeting, last held three years ago, is hosted by the APEC Policy Partnership on Food Security.
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For further details, please contact:
Dini Sari Djalal (in Puerto Varas, Chile) +65 9137 3886 at [email protected]
Michael Chapnick +65 9647 4847 at [email protected]
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