Welcome To Website IAS

Hot news
Achievement

Independence Award

- First Rank - Second Rank - Third Rank

Labour Award

- First Rank - Second Rank -Third Rank

National Award

 - Study on food stuff for animal(2005)

 - Study on rice breeding for export and domestic consumption(2005)

VIFOTEC Award

- Hybrid Maize by Single Cross V2002 (2003)

- Tomato Grafting to Manage Ralstonia Disease(2005)

- Cassava variety KM140(2010)

Centres
Website links
Vietnamese calendar
Library
Visitors summary
 Curently online :  2
 Total visitors :  7516618

FAO happy to contribute early-warning expertise to new platform
Thursday, 2018/09/27 | 07:52:43

Measuring resilience, using artificial intelligence can flank ground action to fight famine/hunger

Figure: A group of woman working at sorghum crops in Niger wait for a UN relief convoy.

 

FAO News, 23 September 2018, New York - FAO welcomes a new World Bank initiative to promote action against famines and is eager to contribute its own considerable tools and resources to make it a success, Director-General José Graziano da Silva said late Sunday.

 

He spoke at an event held during the United Nations General Assembly on partnerships to address severe food insecurity around the world, and focused on the World Bank’s proposed Famine Action Mechanism (FAM).

 

FAO operates several early warning systems and set up the Global Information and Early Warning System on Food and Agriculture, known as GIEWS, in response to the famines of 1974 in the Sahel and East Africa. This platform continues to be developed and fined, and monitors a host of indicators including food supply and demand, in order to provide a better understanding of global food security.

 

FAO has also been one of the leading partners in the development and implementation of the Integrated Food Security Phase Classification (IPC). Designed to be even more precise in identifying the people most at risk of hunger in increasingly complex food crises, IPC has played a critical role in tackling famine in Somalia in 2011 and also in emergencies last year in northeastern Nigeria, Somalia, South Sudan and Yemen.

 

Graziano da Silva strongly welcomed the World Bank’s view that the new FAM tool should build on the IPC system, saying the two can “strengthen, enhance and complement one another”.

 

While welcoming the potential of investments in new technologies such as artificial intelligence in the fight against famine, he emphasized the importance of keeping local stakeholders fully engaged to catalyse consensus on food-security analyses from governments and local actors.

 

Primary data collection and information systems at the country level remain essential and need heavy further investments, he said.

Building resilience

Poor rural people are the most vulnerable to the impacts of climate change and investments in bolstering their resilience are extremely important, Graziano da Silva noted.

 

That means providing cash transfers, seed rations, support for vegetable production and support for livestock treatment and vaccination. Much can be done – as shown by FAO’s recent efforts in Syria – to fight hunger and famine even in times of conflict, he said. In protracted crises, farmers and pastoralists are highly likely to migrate if they do not have access to seeds and fertilizers or ways to restock their herds. Saving livelihoods is the surest way to save lives.

 

Investments in resilience must be targeted at reaching the people most in need, for which better information systems and evidence-based practices are needed, Graziano da Silva said.

 

See http://www.fao.org/news/story/en/item/1153824/icode/

Back      Print      View: 355

[ Other News ]___________________________________________________
  • Brazil offers an extra US $ 17 million to FAO projects as new government takes helm
  • 2014 in review – Another busy year
  • Growing concern for South Sudan`s herders as conflict displaces millions of cattle
  • Biotech and Traditional Farming are Compatible Approaches to Sustainable Agri, Study
  • Report: Weed Control Changes and Herbicide Tolerant Crops in the USA 1996-2012
  • New Study Provides Better Understanding of the Genetic Basis for Drought Tolerant Soybeans
  • Wheat Gene Increases Blight Resistance of American Chestnut Trees
  • China Approves Imports of Biotech Crops
  • IndoBIC Holds Media Visit to Seed Industries in East Java
  • FAO food price index drops in December
  • Origin Receives Biosafety Certificate Renewal for its GM Phytase Corn in China
  • Biotech Rice Expressing CP4-EPSPS Shows Glyphosate Tolerance
  • UK Govt Adviser Calls for Use of Agri Technologies that ``Produce More with Less``
  • Genetic diversity a hidden tool in coping with climate change
  • Cutting down on Amazon deforestation: Watch, think, and act
  • USDA Deregulates Dicamba-Tolerant Cotton and Soybean
  • NAS Holds Workshop on Communicating about GMOs
  • Cell Wall Traits for a FHB Resistant Durum Wheat
  • Ag Biotech Vietnam Conducts Biotech Quiz Contest at Northwestern University
  • Viet Nam Launches National Zero Hunger Challenge

 

Designed & Powered by WEBSO CO.,LTD