Construire une vision commune pour une alimentation et une agriculture durables
FAO Sustainable Agriculture Programme (SO2)Beate Scherf & Ewald Rametsteiner
in the context of FAO’s strategic framework
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• FAO’s strategic framework and new way of working
• Strategic programme 2
• Sustainable food and agriculture
• Sustainable Development Goals and FAO’s Strategic Framework
• Livestock in the Agenda 2030
Content
Global National Coordinator Workshop, 4 July 2016
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FAO’s VisionA world free from hunger and malnutrition
where food and agriculture contribute to improving the living standards of all, especially the poorest, in an economically, socially and environmentally sustainable manner
Meeting/Workshop title, place and date
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• Country ownership and leadership
• Cross-sectoral, integrated approaches
• Multi-stakeholder approaches and partnerships
• Alignment of investments, public and private
• Focus on actions with measurable results
The new way of working
FIVE Strategic Objectives
1Help eliminate hunger, food insecurity and malnutrition
2Make agriculture, forestry and fisheries more productive and sustainable
3Reduce rural poverty
4Enable inclusive and efficient agricultural and food systems
5Increase the resilience of livelihoods to disasters
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2
3
4
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Making agriculture, forestry and fisheries more
productive and sustainable
Strategic Programme2
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• Agriculture produces an average of 23.7 million tonnes of food 19.5 million tonnes of cereals, roots, tubers, fruit and vegetables, 1.1 million tonnes of meat 2.1 billion litres of milk.
• Fisheries and aquaculture harvest daily more than 400 000 tonnes of fish• Forests provide 9.5 million cubic metres of timber and fuelwood• Total value of agricultural production: US$ 7 billion/day• Agriculture employs 1/3 of the world’s workers, and provides livelihoods
for rural households totalling 2.5 billion people • Contributes to many environmental services….
Every day….
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Today, food and agricultural systems are facing an unprecedented confluence of pressures
Population increases and requires more and better food, energy, and other agricultural products
Natural resources are over-exploited, degraded, and their productivity declines
Poverty, inequality, hunger and malnutrition are still higher in rural areas than elsewhere
Climate change and volatile food prices affect vulnerable people, in particular in rural areas
As pressure on resources increase, actions in one part of the agriculture ’system’ increasingly affect other parts
We need a new approach to agriculturethat truly addresses
the different dimensions of sustainability:
economic, environmental and social,and allows us to work much more across
sectors, objectives and interests
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Addressing synergies and conflicts among sub-sectors
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SFA defines five principles for sustainable food and agriculture
Enhance the efficiency of resource use
Conserve, protect, and enhance natural resources
Improve & protect livelihoods and human well-being
Enhance the resilience of people, communities and ecosystems
Promote and improve effective governance
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Main features of SFA approach
• SFA builds on, adds coherence and complements sectoral approaches to agriculture, forestry and fisheries.
• SFA is context-specific, based on the understanding that each situations requires specific solutions
• People are central to the SFA process, which aims at changes in practices through the right combination of incentives
• By nature, transition towards SFA is a multi-stakeholder and cross-sectoral process, based on dialogue, seeking to build a common vision
• SFA approaches are flexible, adaptive, and respond to diverse and changing demands
• SFA approach integrates the external driving forces that influence agriculture
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The SFA approach, piloted in 5 countries
Rwanda Morocco Bangladesh
Burkina Faso Mexico
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4Integrated Approaches to Efficient Resource Use (ERU)Climate Smart Agriculture (CSA)Ecosystem Services and Biodiversity (ESB)Blue Growth Initiative (BGI)
Thematicareasof work
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Regional Initiatives under SP2
4 Asia PacificNear East and North AfricaAfricaLatin America and the Caribbean
regions
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Regional Initiatives under SP2
5Rice RAPBlue Growth RAPWater Scarcity NENAProduction Intensification RAFClimate Change RLC
initiatives
Regional Initiatives under SP2
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5 governanceclimate changenutritiongenderstatistics
cross-cutting
themes
SFALinking FAO work
to the SDGs
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Food and agriculture in the center
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• Achieving the SDGs requires sustainable development within and across agriculture, forestry and fisheries integrated way taking trade-offs and synergies across sectors and sustainability
dimensions into account
• SDGs call for new modalities in the way policies, programmes and investments are pulled together
• Ambition of the SDGs can only be achieved through partnerships and transforming the way different stakeholders cooperate
SDGs and the Sustainable Food and Agriculture approach
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SDGs and the FAO Strategic Objectives
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Livestock in the Agenda 2030: main linkages
Meeting/Workshop title, place and date
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Thank you
http://www.fao.org/about/what-we-do/so2/en/
Eradication of hunger
Elimination of poverty
Sustainable management and use of
natural resources
SP1Hunger
eradicated
SP3 Poverty reduced
SP4Inclusive &
efficient agricultural & food systems
SP5Societies
resilient to shocks
Outcomes & outputs
Outcomes & outputs
SP2Agricultural
productivity & sustainability
improved
FAO’s VisionA world free from hunger and malnutrition where food and agriculture contribute
to improving the living standards of all, especially the poorest, in an economically, socially and environmentally sustainable manner
Gender, Climate Change, Nutrition, Statistics & Governancemainstreamed across all objectives
IN
DICA
TORS
/TAR
GETS
Outcomes & outputs
Outcomes & outputs
Outcomes & outputs
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Methodical approach to address the complex linkages and competition among the users of resources, the natural environment and social, economic, nutritional and environmental goals which need to be recognized and considered in agricultural development programmes and identifying the necessary trade-offs and potential synergies they imply.
Integrated Approaches to Efficient Resource Use (ERU)
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Climate Smart Agriculture (CSA)
CSA assists countries in integrating climate change into their agricultural and food security strategies, policies and practices
• sustainable increase in productivity and income • resilience and climate change adaptation • reduction of GHG emissions and increased carbon sequestration
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When production systems are managed with an ecosystem approach, they may generate not just goods (food and timber, for example) but also a diversity of services and wider benefits such as water purification, cultural values and conservation of biodiversity.
• build a greater understanding on ecosystem services and biodiversity
• demonstrate change is necessary and feasible • build capacity in managing and restoring ecosystem services• present compelling evidence and share knowledge
Ecosystem Services and Biodiversity (ESB)
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Blue Growth Initiative (BGI)
Improving the governance and management of the aquatic resources, the conservation of their biodiversity and habitats, the empowerment of concerned communities, including through better adaptation of vulnerable communities to climatic changes and improved resilience to natural disasters and crises.
• Marine and Inland Capture Fisheries• Global Aquaculture Advancement Partnership• Livelihoods and Food Systems• Economic Growth from Ecosystem Services
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In details…Regional Initiatives under SP2
The Sustainable Production Intensification Initiative in
Africa takes a food system approach in three main areas of work:
1. Sustainable crop and livestock production intensification, with main focus on the production systems of staple and cash crops integrated with livestock, aquaculture and forestry production sectors;
2. Sustainable natural resources management (including fisheries, forestry and animal genetic resources and ecosystem services and biodiversity), and
3. Inclusive value chain development along the production systems
It aims to facilitate the development of comprehensive capacities to develop and promote adoption of integrated innovative practices, and use of technologies that increase production and productivity.The increased production will be channeled through improved value chains to pre-identified market opportunitiesAf
rica
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• Problem: hunger, malnutrition, obesity• Agriculture needs to produce sufficient quantities of foods covering
all essential nutrients to live a healthy life• Sufficient incomes coupled with the right knowledge and attitude
towards healthy foods are required to achieve food security
• Nutrition-sensitive agriculture and food systems1. nutrition-sensitive agriculture2. availability of a wide range of foods at a reasonable price to consumer3. consumer can demand and consume nutritious food all year round to
meet their cultural and nutritional needs
Cross-cutting theme: nutrition
Meeting/Workshop title, place and date
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Cross-cutting theme: gender
SP 1
Help eliminate hunger, food
insecurity and malnutrition
SP 2
Make agriculture, forestry and
fisheries more productive and
sustainable
SP 3
Reduce rural poverty
SP 4
Enable inclusive and efficient
agricultural food systems
SP 5
Increase the resilience of
livelihoods to disasters
Gender-sensitive food and nutrition
security policies, institutional
mechanisms and legal
frameworks
Equal access to natural and productive resources,
services and technologies
Rural women’s empowerment
through participation in
institutions, social protection &
decent employment
Rural women’s empowerment
through agri-food value chains &
entrepreneurship
Gender-sensitive disaster risk reduction &
humanitarian response
Sex-disaggregated data
Capacity development
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