FAO’s Garwe on how to address food system vulnerabilities in Nigeria
The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations says that the Nigerian Government needs to address domestic food production deficits, to reduce food system vulnerabilities. Wadzanai Garwe, an Economist at FAO joins CNBC Africa for more.
Wed, 01 Dec 2021 11:36:12 GMT
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AI Generated Summary
- The global assessment of Nigeria's food systems highlighted the need for a systemic approach beyond traditional food security measures, encompassing environmental, territorial, socioeconomic, and nutritional dimensions.
- Nigeria faces challenges such as climate change impacting farmers, territorial disparities, socioeconomic inequalities, and nutritional issues like malnutrition and obesity.
- Smallholder farmers, essential to Nigeria's food system, require infrastructural support, access to financing, value addition, and processing capabilities. Limited government investment poses a significant obstacle to sustainable agricultural practices.
The Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations has emphasized the urgent need for the Nigerian government to address domestic food production deficits in order to reduce food system vulnerabilities. In a recent interview on CNBC Africa, Wadzanai Garwe, an Economist at FAO, shed light on the challenges facing Nigeria's food system and the crucial steps required to enhance food security and sustainability in the country. The global assessment of Nigeria's food systems conducted ahead of the UN food summit highlighted the need for a comprehensive approach that moves beyond traditional notions of food security, focusing on the entire food production chain from farm to fork. This systemic perspective takes into account various dimensions including environmental sustainability, territorial balance, socioeconomic factors, and food security and nutrition. Nigeria, like many other countries, grapples with complex issues such as climate change impacting farmers, territorial disparities between regions, socioeconomic inequalities, and nutritional challenges like malnutrition and obesity.