Food
shortage threatens 51 countries: Al Attiyah
15
November, 2012
DOHA:
With the world food demand set to rise by 70 percent over the next
thirty years, experts at the International Conference on Food
Security in Dry Lands (FSDL) yesterday called for innovative
solutions to ensure food security.
Addressing
the conference, organised by Qatar’s National Food Security
Programme (QNFSP), Chairman of Qatar Administrative Control &
Transparency Authority (QACTA), H E Abdulla bin Hamad Al Attiyah said
that food shortages threaten around 51 countries embracing one thirds
of the world’s population.
“Due
to similarity in food security challenges in other world countries,
Qatar has launched the initiative of Global Dry Land Alliance (GDLA)
to serve as an umbrella for joint work between these countries,” Al
Attiyah said, adding that it will find innovative solutions to the
problem.
The
two-day conference was held in collaboration with a number of
national, regional and international partner institutions.
The
opening ceremony was attended by President of Qatar University (QU)
Professor Sheikha Abdulla Al Misnad, chairman of the conference,
QNFSP chairman Sheikh Fahad Bin Mohammed Al Attiyah, among other
dignitaries.
Fahad
bin Mohammed Al Attiya said that the conference is being held at a
time when prices of food are going up in the international market. In
a video message, the Secretary General of United Nations, Ban Ki
Moon, said that climate change and food security are closely linked.
“The
effects of climate change are particularly evident in the dry lands,
which occupy more than 40 percent of our planet’s land,” he said.
The UN official said that 18 million people in the Sahel are
struggling through their third drought in less than 10 years.
“The
Sahel crisis also points to the broader threat climate change poses
to development, peace and security,” he said, adding that droughts
such those in United States, Kazakhstan, Russia, Brazil and India
also raise prices in the marketplace, which have serious economic,
political and security ramifications.
Meanwhile,
experts called on a definite solution to agricultural practices in
the Doha Declaration, which will be announced at the end of the FSDL
conference.
They
called on increase in the investment in sustainable agriculture and
to build innovative partnerships among farmers and governments. The
FSDL conference, which ends today, focuses on food security, water
resources, demand and management of these resources as well as
responsible
investment.
H
H Prince Sultan bin Mohammed bin Saud Al Kabeer, who also spoke at a
panel discussion yesterday, said that people in the Arab countries
also need to look at their consumption patterns.
“We
need to look at how much money and food is wasted in celebrations,
such as for weddings. If there is a 40 to 50 percent spillage of
food, then we need to stop it. We need to focus on the culture of
consumption and reduce waste to maximum,” Al Kabeer said.
Qatar
will host the Climate Change Conference (COP18) later this month,
which will discuss the impact of climate change on food security.The
Peninsula
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