Technology, innovation key to reshaping food systems: UN

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FAO Director-General Qu Dongyu

Rome,  The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organisation is striving to develop a new business model based on science, data, transparency and accountability that fosters strong partnerships with the private sector, FAO Director-General Qu Dongyu said on Friday.

“The world needs a strong, efficient and dynamic FAO. And FAO needs strong reliable partnerships with you,” Qu told representatives from the private sector at a meeting held on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York.

The meeting offered a platform to discuss and reinforce partnerships for realizing the much-needed transformation in food systems, and mobilizing all available technology, innovation, knowledge and expertise to achieve positive impact at scale in the agriculture sectors, according to a statement from the Rome-based FAO.

FAO presented the new Hand-in-Hand Initiative to private sector and foundation representatives, including the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and dairy giant Danone, as well as UN entities and other institutions, with the aim of garnering support and feedback, the statement said.

Hand-to-Hand looks at bringing together countries with the highest poverty and hunger rates and developed countries to support development efforts in the Least Landlocked Developing Countries, Least Developed Small Island Developing States, and countries affected by food crises.

In its next phase, the initiative will support highly-populated, less developed countries, the statement added.

FAO works to make private sector investments compliant with the Sustainable Development Goals across the agricultural value chain, the statement underlined.

An example is FAO’s AgrInvest programme being implemented in Uganda, Kenya, Ethiopia, Niger, and Burkina Fas, which leverages development funding to unlock private investments for the agri-food sector, the statement noted.