Author: Camilla Toulmin
Affiliated organization: Africa Europe Foundation
Site of publication: Friends of Europe
Type of publication: Commentary
Date of publication: September 29th, 2021
Strategic autonomy is a concept that has found itself at the top of the European Union’s agenda during the von der Leyen Commission, but the pandemic has driven home the need for regions all over the world to be able to produce key necessities themselves. For Africa, the focus has been on ensuring it can feed its growing population as borders closed, supply chains were disrupted and climate change took no break. The pandemic has shown the risks of being on the wrong side of ‘vaccine nationalism’ and the critical need to manufacture vaccines locally to increase healthcare resilience and autonomy on both continents.
The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) has highlighted the increase in people facing hunger globally due to the COVID-19 pandemic and its impact on global supply chains in particular. As communities around the world turned to greater mutual aid, especially those at the end of long global value chains, many large-scale producers were forced to dump food, even while many of the workers responsible for producing it were struggling to feed themselves.
While the pandemic made evident the fault lines in global supply chains, the biggest threat to global food security is still to be addressed. The climate crisis, often viewed through the prism of sustainable energy, is at the heart of the link between food security and public health. Whilst the increased risk of zoonoses due to biodiversity loss has been put on the agenda, the root cause of this loss – intensive monocrop production – is ignored.
Ahead of the Africa-Europe Summit, scheduled for February 2022, the Sustainable Agriculture and Food Systems Strategy Group of the Africa-Europe Foundation (AEF) aims to play its part in bridging the gap between the views underlined at the UN summit and those of its critics, predominantly civil society organisations and small-scale food producers
Last week’s UN Food Systems Summit concluded, Africa and Europe have the opportunity to build an agri-food partnership on a common vision for food systems transformation by 2030. This should be centred around food sovereignty, a concept advocated at the World Food Summit in 1996, referring to the right of people to decide their own food systems, to provide healthy and nutritious food grown in their locality, and to practise climate-appropriate agriculture and agroecology.
Beyond this, any Africa-Europe agri-food partnership must have the ambition to transform food systems sustainably through policy initiatives, financial tools and co-innovation. Ahead of the Africa-Europe Summit, scheduled for February 2022, the Sustainable Agriculture and Food Systems Strategy Group of the Africa-Europe Foundation (AEF) aims to play its part in bridging the gap between the views underlined at the UN summit and those of its critics, predominantly civil society organisations and small-scale food producers. Critics have highlighted the need for transparency around agenda-setting and vocalised concerns around the continued prioritisation of technology and innovation over agroecology and food sovereignty. Some work has already begun, including calling for the creation of cross-continental networks of excellence in regenerative agriculture, and large-scale mobility programmes specific to African and European agri-food entrepreneurs.
As France and Senegal both plan for their respective presidencies of the EU and AU from next January onwards, the stars may be aligned for a partnership to give new impetus to this part of the African continent
Scaling-up agri-food SMEs, by offering access to financial tools including further concessional resources and mentoring, can be a transformative step towards building this partnership. Additional support is needed for co-innovation, training and professional development in the agri-food sector.
Pioneering initiatives in Africa are leading the way – the Great Green Wall aims to combat desertification and create new fertile ground for farming and potentially bring prosperity to the region by 2030. As France and Senegal both plan for their respective presidencies of the EU and AU from next January onwards, the stars may be aligned for a partnership to give new impetus to this part of the African continent.
A true Africa-Europe partnership on agri-food has the potential to eliminate food insecurity for hundreds of millions worldwide, mitigate the existing effects of climate change whilst slowing the speed of the crisis, and create decent work opportunities for people across the world. In other words, by taking a collective approach to the food security, climate and public health crises, we have the potential to solve all three. What we need now is not a magic bullet, but for Africa and Europe to seize the moment – and build secure, ecological and sovereign systems for all.
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