Honourable Robert Persaud, Minister of Agriculture
His Excellency Edwin Carrington, Secretary General,
CARICOM Secretariat
Dr. Dindyal Permaul, PS, Ministry of Agriculture
Mr. Trevor Murray, Director of Operations and
Integration for the Caribbean Region, IICA
Representatives of International and Regional
Institutions
Specially invited guests, farmers, friends, ladies
and gentlemen
It gives me great pleasure to be here today at
the opening of this workshop for the Formulation of
a Regional Policy for Food and Nutrition Security in
the Caribbean. I also wish to take this opportunity
to welcome you my new home, Guyana. As you know, FAO
has recently opened an Office in Georgetown and I
can safely say that even after just 4 months on the
job as the FAO Representative, I feel very much at
home in this country. This is, in no small measure,
due to the warmth and hospitality of the Guyanese
people. I am sure the over the next two days you
will experience it for yourself.
The workshop is, indeed timely, as it comes on
the heels of the recently completed World Summit on
Food Security which was held two weeks ago from 16 –
18 November at FAO’s Headquarters in Rome. The
Summit brought together heads of governments of over
100 countries to discuss the issue of food security
and drew our attention to the fact that the number
of hungry people in the world has now reached the 1
billion mark. More telling is the fact that, one in
every six persons in the world suffers from
malnutrition and 5 children die from malnutrition
every 30 seconds. This occurring at a time when the
world boasts of advanced technological advancements.
Here in the Caribbean, the figures suggest that
up until 2005 the Caribbean was making good progress
towards achieving the MDG hunger target of reducing
the number of hungry people by 50% by 2015. The data
revealed that the proportion of food insecure in the
region declined to 23 percent in 2003/05 compared to
26 percent in 1990/92, the base year for the World
Food Summit targets. However the situation is not
entirely positive, as the same figures showed that
the number of malnourished persons in the region
stands at 7.6 million (including Haiti), which is
the same as in the beginning of the nineties. This
means that close to one in every four persons in the
region is undernourished.
Undoubtedly the soaring food prices of 2007 have
reversed some of the gains made at the beginning of
the twenty-first century, but the extent and impact
still need to be further researched. Both the IDB
and FAO have estimated, however, that in Latin
America and the Caribbean the number of food
insecure rose by 6 million as a direct result of the
high food prices.
A CARICOM/FAO/CFNI study conducted in 2006-2007,
concluded that “Food security is being compromised
not in terms of availability of food, but in terms
of accessibility and consumption/utilization”. The
Study further revealed that total food calories
availability in the region exceeds the recommended
population goals, but that significant inequality in
distribution remains, particularly as it relates to
poverty. Furthermore, the study found that we import
more close to 50 percent of the regional food needs.
With the exception of Belize and Guyana, all the
countries are net food importers, with the smaller
economies of the OECS being the most highly
dependent on imports. Moreover the change of diets
as a result of the economic growth of the countries
of the region is triggering an increase in
non-communicable diseases.
Caribbean Regional Food Security is therefore as
much related to food consumption patterns and
lifestyles of the Caribbean people. This finding
implies that there is need for strong partnership
which draws on a wide range of stakeholders, not
just in agriculture, but in health, nutrition,
education, trade and social policy.
This workshop is therefore, a step in the right
direction. It has brought together the main
stakeholders in the agricultural sector as well as
in trade, nutrition, health and education to work
together to develop the Regional Food and Nutrition
Security Policy. It responds to the mandates of the
Heads of government in their call for food security
and sustainable development as one of the main
pillars of the Regional Transformation Programme for
Agriculture, as well as the goals of the Jagdeo
Initiative and Community Agricultural Policy under
the Revised Treaty of Chaguaramas.
It is consistent with Five Rome Principles for
Sustainable Food Security which were adopted by the
World Food Summit. These Principles included: 1)
invest in country-owned plans channeling resources
to well-designed and results-based programmes and
partnerships (2) foster strategic coordination at
all levels to improve governance, promote better
allocation of resources and avoid duplication; 3)
strive for twin-track approach to food security
including short-term emergency and long term
development measures; (4) work to improve the
efficiency, coordination and effectiveness of
multilateral institutions and (5) ensure sustained
and substantial commitment by all partners to
investment in agriculture and food security and
nutrition.
It also builds on the many initiatives that FAO
has taken in the area of Food Security in the
Caribbean. These include:
• Phase one of the Caribbean Regional Food
Security Project – Promoting CARICOM/CARIFORUM
food security. This project was funded by the
Italian government to the tune of US 4.9 million
with the objective of improving the food
security situation of the CARIFORUM member
states both individually and as a whole, by
increasing the availability and access to
adequate quantities of safe, quality assured
food products to food insecure and poor rural
communities across the region.
• That project was supported by another US $
5 million in TCP projects which provided
technical assistance in the form of South South
Cooperation experts from Cuba and China.
• Phase II of the Promoting CARICOM/CARIFORUM
Food Security Project, with a budget of US $
4.07 million seeks to improve the food security
situation of the CARICOM/CARIFORUM states at
different levels through strengthening the food
policy environment and the support services to
promote efficient and sustainable food systems.
This project comprises two main components, - a
Policy Support Team and a Value Chain Team. The
Policy Support team headed by Dr. Pirro-Tomaso
Perri is housed in the CARICOM Secretariat,
while the Value Chain team, headed by Mr. Robert
Best is based in the FAO Office in Trinidad.
• The national and regional Initiative on
Soaring Food Prices projects
• In addition, in response to the request of
the Caribbean governments, FAO has implemented a
number of Technical Cooperation Projects at the
national and regional level to address a range
of issues in the agriculture, nutrition,
forestry and fisheries – all of which impact on
food security.
• Moreover, FAO’s normative programmes in
Land and Water, Agricultural Policy, Food safety
and nutrition, fisheries and forestry, plant
production and protection and animal health and
production also contribute the overall support
of the Organization to Caribbean Regional Food
Security. Ladies and gentlemen, as I look at the
familiar faces in the audience who have been in
the field of agriculture as long as I have, I
ask myself, have the problems and constraints to
agricultural production in the Caribbean been
alleviated or changed over that time? Thirty
years ago, when I was a teenager, at UWI, the
problems were the same. Why is that? What are we
doing about it? Do we just continue to talk
about our problems and blame the previous
generation for the inertia or dare I say, the
decline of the sector? Or are we finally going
to do something about it during our watch?
This workshop, colleagues, is our opportunity to
change – to stop talking and do something about
agriculture, food and nutrition security in the
Caribbean. Let us not view the next two days as just
another talk shop. By December 1, let us go back to
our respective countries knowing exactly what we
have to do to make a difference for once and for
all.
In the words of Catherine Pulsifer, “Rather than
thinking "if and when", start doing, take action ,
stop talking about if and when” FAO stands willing
to assist and work with our partners to make a
difference.
I wish you well in your deliberations and a
successful workshop.
Thank you.
Contact:
piu@caricom.org