Canada announces food security initiative


Oct 19th, 2009 3:45 PM UTC
By Beth Adler

On Friday Canada’s Minister of International Cooperation, Beverly Oda, unveiled the Canadian International Development Agency’s (CIDA) Food Security Strategy in an important step towards actualizing Canada’s pledge from the 2009 G8 summit. Canada has made global food security one of its key priorities. The outlined strategy is intended to address the residual impact of the food crisis, as well as the effects of the current economic crisis and climate change on developing countries, through sustainable and effective initiatives.

Minister Oda announced that “CIDA will follow three paths: food aid including nutrition, agriculture, and research toward helping developing countries become more food self-sufficient, an essential base for all long-term development…” The strategy includes measures for short-, medium-, and long-term initiatives designed to assist the poorest—like the developing world’s smallholder farmers—in weathering external shock like food shortages, and addressing obstacles to economic growth like constraints on market access and agricultural productivity.

On Friday the Minister also announced a new Canadian International Food Security (CIFS) Research Fund. This $62-million fund, a joint venture between CIDA and the International Development Research Centre, will support research partnerships between Canadian and developing-country organizations to conduct research activities that will help address food insecurity.

The Food Security Strategy builds on Canada’s commitment at the 2009 G8 summit in L’Aquila to more than double its investment in funding for food security and agriculture (including food aid) with an additional $600 million in funding over three years. It is essential that these commitments, when operationalized, work in close partnership with developing countries. Activities must take into account the needs of poor, smallholder farmers, and work to harness the potential for smallholder farmers to increase agricultural productivity and contribute to food security in their communities and regions.

Canada will be hosting the 2010 G8 summit, and we are looking forward to seeing CIDA’s Food Security Initiative in action in the fight against hunger and poverty.

TAGS: Food Security in Focus, Policy News

  1. Cathy Allseitssays: Oct 20th, 2009 6:24 AM EST

    October 20, 2009 at 6:24 am

    Thank you Minister Oda,
    In my opinion the impact of CIDA’s Food Security Initiative in action in the fight against hunger and poverty, could even be stronger if they could correspond with World Food Programme (WFP) to see what they have already discovered. That way proven help can be used in more areas to bring relief faster.

  2. Jeff Canniffsays: Nov 23rd, 2009 9:41 AM EST

    November 23, 2009 at 9:41 am

    May the Lord Bless and make fruitful this global initative. In Jesus Name!!

  3. Cathy Allseitssays: Nov 23rd, 2009 10:41 AM EST

    November 23, 2009 at 10:41 am

    It is so awesome to see that Canada has taken a vital role in the future now. Understanding that the need to plan for the future is an investment for all mankind and should not be looked upon as having to give money away but as a solution our most knowledgeable experts’ world wide can take control over now.

    Country officials that would try to take past pledged money away from its original need to use on current climate control tactics is in my opinion not wise, and not engaging for solutions is wasting the responsibility that is entrusted with their positions.

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