Thursday, 21 June 2018

EAT Stockholm Food Forum: Global Panel Worried over the escalating rate of Obesity


                                                     Tom Arnold,

Tom Arnold, former Director General of the Institute of International and European Affairs (IIEA) who doubles as a member of the Global Panel has expressed worry over the rate at which obesity is escalating as a result of bad food systems.
According to him, all over the world there is an increase in overweight and it is the problem that needs critical attention.
Mr. Arnold in an interview with this reporter at the just-ended EAT Stockholm Food Forum, said the challenges which are emanating from lifestyle, bad food system and eating habits are going to store up problems in terms of diabetes, non-communicable-diseases and public health generally.
Governments should try to arrange with private sectors in food processing and have policies are in place to ensure that bad outcomes of diets are avoided, he admonished.
He added, currently major issues on the table of Global Panel Members are on urban diets, improving diets in the era of food markets transformations and acknowledging that diets are changing in a lot of countries for variety of reasons.
He said the goal of Global Panel is to ensure that things are done in the right directions by advising governments and giving recommendations based on research.
Mr. Arnold observed that, it is usually poor people who are mostly affected “Who are not eating particularly well” since sometimes healthier diets are more expensive hence they end up eating less good quality food.
“It is not a simple matter to say avoid unhealthy diet it’s about helping people have access to better quality diets.”he noted.
He advised that leaders focus on educating people on lifestyle specially in the urban areas where people opt for a lot of processed foods.
There should be public policies in place to encourage people to opt for healthier diets and better health systems, he added.
Fish and vegetables should be made available, attractive and affordable to encourage people consume it than unhealthy options.
Governments have to come in to play a role by having proper policies for labelling that, some products are just unhealthy and packaging must be clear that it is unhealthy, “Increasingly we have try to at least point it out to people and make sure that they are very aware of the consequences of the choices they are making.”
Sandy Thomas, Director, Global Panel on Agriculture and Food Systems for Nutrition said the aim is to help inform and influence governments to manage food systems so they deliver by healthier diets for all people in a more accessible and affordable way.
She stated the reason Global Panel places emphasis on healthy diets is because there are various forms of malnutrition in Ghana and other developing countries particularly Sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia where there is under-nutrition with staunting children under 5 with micro nutrients deficiency in diet, lack of ion, zinc etc.
What the panel does is to look to the evidence available to help governments introduce policies that will help combat these forms of malnutritions and deliver healthy diets.
She commended Ghana for making a lot of progress in a relatively short number of years by managing to bring staunting in children under 5 down from above 30% to below20% but urged to go down further and also for the introduction of the school feeding programme which contributes to healthy diets in children.
She advised that leaders should support informal markets to prepare healthier food so that people are offered a choice by making sure that markets have better sanitations, better storage for foods, they can offer more fruits and vegetables and foods doesn’t have to be cooked in fat.
According to Global Panel’s briefs for 2017, food systems are failing to deliver secure access to safe, high-quality diets for everyone.  In this context, it is essential to improve food environments so that they can deliver a range of benefits to improved nutrition, healthier populations, and more productive economies.
Nutrition is a new global priority, reflected in the current United Nation’s designated Decade of Action on Nutrition. In the 2016 Foresight report of the Global Panel on Agriculture and Food Systems for Nutrition laid out the scale of the crisis which uncovered that more than three billion people around the world are currently affected by malnutrition as a direct impact of low-quality diets.
More than two billion have insufficient vitamins and minerals, and incidences of overweight and obesity are growing in every region.
The latter are of particular concern, being responsible for the rise of diet-related non-communicable diseases (NCDs), including Type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease and certain forms of cancer.
The challenge for policymakers around the world is to implement the policies and actions that are needed to ‘fix’ today’s food systems, which are failing to deliver secure access to safe, high-quality diets for everyone.
In this context, it is essential to improve food environments so that they can deliver a range of benefits: improved nutrition, healthier populations, and more productive local economies.
The Global Panel’s Foresight report emphasizes that high-quality diets can only be achieved by implementing coordinated, nutrition-enhancing policies across the whole food system.  Such actions represent a way for nations around the world to use quality diets as a key policy entry point for tackling all forms of malnutrition, from persistent under-nutrition to overweight and obesity.
The bottom line is that today’s food systems are failing to drive improvements in nutrition; and, without decisive action, malnutrition will continue to grow in scale and impact.  This will have severe implications for health.
The risk factors associated with low-quality, less nutritious diets already pose a greater risk to health than unsafe sex, alcohol, drug and tobacco use combined.
Instructively, the Global Panel is an independent group of influential experts with a commitment to tackling global challenges in food and nutrition security. It works to ensure that agriculture and food systems support access to nutritious foods at every stage of life.

Its members are: John Beddington (Co-Chair) and Former United Kingdom Government Chief Scientific Advisor;  John Kufuor (Co-Chair) and Former President of Ghana; Akinwumi Adesina, President, African Development Bank ; Tom Arnold, Director General, Institute of International and European Affairs (IIEA);  José Graziano da Silva, Director General, Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO);  Agnes Kalibata President, Alliance for a Green Revolution in Africa (AGRA);  Rachel Kyte, Special Representative of the UN Secretary General for Sustainable Energy and CEO of Sustainable Energy for All (SE4All);  Maurício Antônio Lopes, President, Brazilian Agricultural Research Corporation (Embrapa); Rhoda Peace Tumusiime, Former Commissioner for Rural Economy and Agriculture, African Union Commission; Srinath Reddy, President, Public Health Foundation of India; and Emmy Simmons Board Member, Partnership to Cut Hunger and Poverty in Africa/AGree


Tuesday, 19 June 2018

EAT Stockholm Food Forum: Swedish Deputy PM Bemoans the Depleting Rate of World’s Fish Stock  


                     Isabella Lövin – Swedish Deputy PM                      Photo credit: EAT SFF/Johan Lygrell





The Swedish Deputy Prime Minister (PM) and Minister for International Development Cooperation and Climate, Isabella Lövin, has bemoaned the rate at which the world’s fish stock is being depleted.
According to her, currently more than 70% of the world’s fish stock today are fully over-fished to the limit that you cannot fish.
She made this known at the just-ended EAT Stockholm Food Forum held in Sweden.
Madam Lövin admitted that Sweden had not had a very sustainable fishing either which had resulted in development of the stocks depleted over  last 40 years.
“We have had a long experience of unsustainable fishing in Europe as well and it is slowly, slowly improving now but for sure the stocks are at very low levels.”
Madam Lövin added that the evidence is extremely clear globally that fishing with dynamite and other types of unsustainable fishing methods are just destructive but was hopeful that education for the fishermen and self regulations could help curb the situation.
She observed that there have been a lot of interest from fishing community and the last 15 years has seen enormous difference in attitudes within the fishing industry as a result of demand for better ways of doing things from consumers.
“Last year, at the United Nation’s biggest Ocean Conference there were a lot of voluntary commitments from countries, organizations and private sector and one of the major initiatives and commitments was from major fishing companies in the world”, according to her.
These big players have now commited to protect the ocean especially illegal fishing, unsustainable fishing, to eliminate child labour, Madam Lövin stated.
Those are the big companies in fishing and  the pressure is both from consumers and also from the reality of sourcing a sustainable fish, “If they don’t do that they will die” as the saying goes: “Adopt or die”, she noted.
Touching on food security, the Deputy Prime Minister said it was to ensure that, people understand what climate change will mean for growing crops today.
She said: “ Today, we are here in Sweden, we have extreme weather even going on, right now we had no rain, we have a few drops today, this is the first time for more than five weeks that we had rain” she described it as never ever happened before.
If this is happening in a rich country like Sweden then the consequence for developing countries will be serious that is why Sweden is contributing to adoptations, strategies and monitor that by increasing weather report assistance for farmers, Madam Lövin stressed.
She cautioned that the mistakes made in the industrialized worlds would not be repeated in the developing countries when setting up food production system.
To this end, the Deputy Prime Minister therefore advised that developing countries should endeavour to invest in renevable energy and enough storage system to cut down post-harvest losses.
The 2018 edition of the annual EAT Stockholm Food Forum convened over 600 delegates comprising policy makers, scientists, researchers,  politicians, industry players doctors, entrepreneurs, chefs, and civil society organisations from over 50 countries who are interested in ensuring change in the world to make a comfortable place to live.
The Government of Sweden hosted the delegates at the fifth annual EAT Stockholm Food Forum, from June 11-12, in Stockholm, Sweden to deliberate on prevailing challenges facing food and find sustainable solutions to them.
The forum for the first time is jointly hosted by EAT and the Government of Sweden.
EAT is an independent non-profit organization with three core partners: the Wellcome Trust, the Stordalen Foundation and the Stockholm Resilience Centre.
Climate change, effects of climate change, sustainable food production and food waste topped the topics for discussions at the forum and for two days, delegates deliberatedon how best to make a change in the world by transforming the food system in order to make healthy food available to all, while protecting the environment and depletion of limited resources.
During the two day forum,experts advised that the developing countries should invest in proper food storage system and renewable energy to cut down waste.
Again developing countries and the world as a whole would be able to minimize hunger and malnutrition if an aggressive agenda is pursued to sanitise how food is produced, prepared and consumed.
By Maame Agyeiwaa Agyei,