******EMBARGOED UNTIL 10 June 2pm EDT******
Canada is first to commit funds to IFAD facility created to help avert food crisis
Rome, 10 June 2020 – Canada announced today that it will be the first country to
pledge funds to a new facility set up by the UN’s International Fund for Agricultural Development
(IFAD) to help prevent a food crisis in some of the world’s poorest and
most marginalized rural communities in the wake of COVID-19.
The Rural Poor Stimulus Facility was launched in April by IFAD’s Goodwill Ambassadors, Idris and Sabrina Elba
to support small-scale farmers and rural producers to grow and sell
food at a time when restrictions in movement and trade threaten to turn
the health crisis into a food crisis in high risk countries.
“We
would like to thank Canada for its commitment to the world’s most
vulnerable people and for taking on this leading role to commit to the
Facility,” said Gilbert F. Houngbo, President of IFAD. “With this
support, more rural farmers, particularly women, can have the timely
access to the inputs, information, markets and liquidity they need to
ensure that the COVID-19 pandemic does not escalate into a bigger
humanitarian disaster.”
“We
must act quickly to address the impact of COVID-19 on the most
vulnerable communities, and Canada is responding to the severe food
security needs brought on by the pandemic,” said Minister Karina Gould, Canada’s Minister of International Development. “Our
investments will be helping to maintain food production and
distribution, and protect the world’s poorest from the loss of their
livelihoods and the serious health consequences of malnutrition.”
Announced
at today’s meeting of the Group of Friends on Food Security and
Nutrition, Canada will commit CA$6 million to the Facility, on top of a
$150 million highly concessional loan for climate-focused activities to
the Fund earlier this year.
According to the Secretary-General’s Policy Brief on the impact of COVID-19 on food security and nutrition
released yesterday, the emerging global recession could disrupt the
functioning of food systems, with the risk of a global food emergency if
immediate action isn’t taken. The vast majority of the world’s population rely on local markets for their sustenance, which are often highly susceptible to disruption.
With
their movements restricted in many places to contain further spread of
the virus, many rural small-scale producers are unable to access markets
to sell produce or to buy inputs, such as seeds or fertilizer. Closures
of major transport routes and export bans are also likely to affect
food systems adversely. As entire production chains are disrupted and
unemployment rises, the most vulnerable include daily labourers, small
businesses and informal workers, who are very often women and young
people.
The Facility is part of the UN’s broader socio-economic response framework
and it will focus on ensuring rural producers have access to inputs,
markets, financial services and digital information to mitigate the
pandemic’s impact on food production and rural employment. IFAD has
already committed US$40 million in seed money and aims to raise at least an additional $200 million from governments, foundations and the private sector.
About 80 percent of the world’s poorest and most food-insecure people live in rural areas. Around 135
million people were recently categorised as facing acute food
insecurity and malnutrition. It is estimated that this number could
nearly double before the end of the year due to the impacts of COVID-19.
Canada
is a founding member of IFAD, and has committed more than US$463
million to the Fund, with a particular focus on women’s rights and
climate adaptation to better support sustainable agricultural production
and access to markets. In 2012, Canada was the first donor to IFAD’s
Adaptation for Smallholder Agriculture Programme (ASAP) to channel
climate finance to rural small-scale farmers. Canada recently partnered
with IFAD in Mali to promote access to financial services in rural
communities, particularly for women and young people.
More about the Rural Poor Stimulus Facility
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