By Glauce Fleury www.glaucefleury.com UN calls for governments to repurpose subsidies to reduce harm to health and environment; see how to help
When the COVID-19 pandemic started disrupting the lives of Canadians in March 2020, no one knew how and for how long we would be affected. Almost two years later, we’re still facing its challenges and seeing its negative impacts. To build a post-COVID-19 future that is more sustainable, the United Nations is calling for governments to rethink how agriculture is subsidized, as was indicated in their September 2021 report. Currently 87 per cent of US$540 billion subsidies are used to of support to producers using “measures that are often inefficient, inequitable, distort food prices, hurt people’s health, and degrade the environment.” It’s crucial to reflect on the link between the UN report, subsidies in Canada, and the pandemic’s impact. The Canadian Agricultural Partnership — a suite of programs jointly funded by the federal, provincial, and territorial governments — is a $3-billion five-year (2018-2023) investment in the agriculture and agri-food sector aiming to strengthen it and grow it. But according to Statistics Canada, almost one in seven residents reported food insecurity early in the pandemic. Food bank visits have increased by 20 per cent since 2019. Spikes coincided with the ending of the Canada Emergency Response Benefit (CERB), continuation of lockdowns, and unemployment, notes a Food Banks Canada report. On its website, the federal government states that a wide range of actions have been taken to address food system issues, but around one million Canadian households are unable to access healthy food. That may surprise many, as we live in a developed country that is a member of G7 — the group of the most advanced economies that help shape global progress. We have resources and knowledge to find solutions. So, to better understand and address the linkages and decision making within food systems. Canada has been working on its first-ever national food policy. Ending Poverty Learning about food systems is key because they impact our health and the environment. The UN call for repurposing agricultural support — issued jointly by the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and United Nations Environment Programme (UNEP) — aims to achieve more of the 2030 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). These goals represent an urgent global call to end poverty by implementing strategies that improve health and education, reduce inequality, and boost the economy while addressing climate change and preserving oceans and forests. When discussing food systems, we need to reflect on methods used by industrial agriculture — the large-scale, intensive production of crops and animals. Many foods we buy at grocery stores (meat, dairy, eggs, fruits, and vegetables) are produced using those methods, which may involve using chemical fertilizers on crops and antibiotics in animals. Consequences include soil depletion and erosion, water pollution, increased greenhouse gas (GHG) emissions, and pesticide overuse. Through GHG emissions from different sources, agriculture is one of the main contributors to climate change, highlights UNEP. In some way, we’re all responsible but we can choose to reduce the carbon footprint of our meals. That means doing more than just buying local, since transportation makes up a small amount of emissions from food. Instead, what we should consider is how much land and which farming methods are being used to produce what we plan to buy before we actually buy it. Women and other smallholders Efficient farming looks beyond production. It’s also about environmental sustainability, public health, and economic inclusivity. Agriculture and agri-food systems are critical to help end poverty and hunger, achieve food security, improve nutrition, and reduce inequality. But as it currently is, the support to producers around the globe is a barrier to achieving the SDGs and the targets of the Paris Agreement. Rethinking how industrial agriculture is subsidized is urgent because, besides being biased towards measures that harm nature, climate, nutrition, and health, the current support is disadvantaging women and other smallholders, says the UN report. Considering that farming is responsible for about 75 per cent of the world’s freshwater use and a quarter of GHG emissions, becoming better informed about food systems can help to ensure our voices are heard as changes arise. Sources: https://www150.statcan.gc.ca/n1/pub/45-28-0001/2020001/article/00039-eng.htm https://hungercount.foodbankscanada.ca/ https://agriculture.canada.ca/en/about-our-department/key-departmental-initiatives/food-policy/food-policy-canada Canada and the G7 (international.gc.ca) Industrial Agriculture 101 | NRDC A multi-billion-dollar opportunity – Repurposing agricultural support to transform food systems (fao.org)
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