Glenn B Gregorio, UN Food Systems Champion 2021 – The FAO? ASA KA PA
We have a Champion! Via Facebook post, it was announced 10 March 2021 that National Academy of Science and Technology of the Philippines Academician Glenn B Gregorio has been selected as one of the new UN Food Systems Champions to be meeting during the UN Food Systems Summit 2021.
Charissa Luci-Atienza has
that pertinent report (12 March 2021, “Filipino Rice Scientist Named As
UN Food Systems Champion[1],”
Manila Bulletin). The Summit may be
held this September, venue not announced.
I say Mr Gregorio deserves the selection, being rich in local
and international experiences in basic & applied sciences. According to Ms
Charissa, he has received several awards, including locally, Outstanding Young Scientist in the Field of
Genetics (2004), and William Dar-Crop
Science Society of the Philippines Achievement Award in Research Management
(2014); internationally, Honorary Foreign
Scientist Award at the Rural Development Administration of Korea
(2002-2005), and Ho Chi Minh Medal for Having
Great Contribution to the Cause of Agriculture and Rural Development of Vietnam
(2012),
The Summit will seek “to align stakeholders around a common
understanding and narrative of a food system framework as a foundation for
concerted action, making food and food systems widespread issues for advocacy
and action to achieve the 2030 UN Sustainable Development) Agenda.” A food
system is “made up of the environment, people, institutions and processes by
which agricultural products are produced, processed and brought to consumers.”
Malnutrition is what drives the Summit. FAO said,
“Addressing malnutrition requires integrated action and complementary
interventions in agriculture and the food system, in natural resource
management, in public health and education, and in broader policy domains.”
World Food Programme Executive Director Ertharin Cousin said, “Prioritizing
nutrition today is an investment in our collective global future (that) must involve
food, agriculture, health and education systems.”
Executive Secretary of the UN Framework Convention on
Climate Change Christiana Figueres
“stressed that food systems are closely linked to climate change as the latter
is making it harder to feed a growing population. If we are to sustainably feed
the world’s population in the future, we need to see action today that prepares
farmers around the world for the impacts of climate change.”
ASA KA PA (see masthead of my blog
above): With all that, see the contrasting
high concern of FAO on food systems, and lack of concern on food producers?
Farmers have always been losers when
it comes to economic returns in food systems. So? Millions of them have been
leading poor lives. Please, the farmers
deserve what they deserve!
The UN Food Systems
Summit… aims to raise awareness of food systems’ centrality to the entire
sustainable development agenda, and the urgency of transforming food systems,
particularly in the wake of a global pandemic.
Yet
shows absence of concern on millions of food producers who deserve much, much more.
To me, ignoring the plight of these farmers is unpardonable on the part of the FAO.
I hope Mr Gregorio will bring this matter to the attention of the Food Systems
Summit this September!@517
[1]https://mb.com.ph/2021/03/12/filipino-rice-scientist-named-as-un-food-systems-champion/?fbclid=IwAR3Knh-5wW_mKctnbKk87xvfJzqfR09DQeeWjIZ1WFKYlMzdNRfJ2aEAzcI
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