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FAO and WTO: Food safety and trade should improve nutrition and boost development
Thursday, 2015/11/05 | 07:37:09

Small-scale producers in developing countries must access world markets says WTO's Azevêdo

 

A citrus packing house in Morocco. One area of FAO's work with the WTO is on food safety standards.

 

FAO 2 November 2015, Rome - FAO and the World Trade Organization (WTO) agreed today to strengthen their cooperation to promote international food trade and safety in ways that improve peoples' nutrition and allow small-scale producers to have better access to international agriculture markets.

 

"We look forward to ensuring fair trade of agricultural and food products through this stronger (FAO-WTO) cooperation," FAO Director-General José Graziano da Silva said in remarks made to his WTO counterpart, Roberto Azevêdo during an event at the UN food agency's headquarters.

 

"On the one hand trade is likely to play an increasing role in meeting the growing demand from food-deficit countries. On the other hand, greater trade openness may undermine the capacity of local people to produce their own food," the FAO Director-General added.

 

Graziano da Silva warned that failure to reach a balanced solution on issues relating to production and trade of agricultural products could derail the international community's recently agreed sustainable development goal to eradicate world hunger.

 

For his part Azevêdo stressed that at the WTO, "we seek to ensure that the global trading system works for all, that it is fair and balanced," in a way "which supports growth and development and allows people to access the goods and services that they need" including food.

 

"When I visit developing countries, especially in Africa...business people tell me about the difficulties they face in meeting the required standards," the WTO Director-General said, adding that it is essential to provide capacity building for producers in developing countries, an area of work where his Organization and FAO are seeking to deepen their collaboration.

 

Azevêdo referred to the 10th WTO Ministerial Conference in Nairobi on 15-18 December 2015, where the role of agriculture - especially in development and in improving the lives of people in least developed countries - is high on the agenda.

 

Issues for discussion include addressing trade restrictions that bear on imports, such as the lowering of tariffs, the need to minimize domestic agricultural subsidies and, the "distortions these programs produce," Azevêdo said, as well as the need to eliminate export subsidies.

 

The WTO Director-General expressed hope that some agreement would be reached in Nairobi on the issue of export subsidies. This would mark "an extremely significant breakthrough," and would be especially important for developing and least developed countries.

 

See more: http://www.fao.org/news/story/en/item/340935/icode/

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