Fifth APEC Ministerial Meeting on Food Security
Fifth APEC Ministerial Meeting on Food Security: Puerto
Varas, Chile, 23 August 2019
Towards Integrated Smart and
Sustainable Food Systems
Preamble
1. We, the APEC
Ministers Responsible for Food Security, met in Puerto
Varas, Chile, from 23 to 24 August 2019 under the
chairmanship of Mr. Antonio Walker, Minister of Agriculture
of Chile, to exchange views and identify areas of
cooperation that support food security in the Asia- Pacific
region. We welcomed the participation of representatives of
FAO, OECD and IICA.
2. Under the overarching theme of
“Connecting People, Building the Future”, and
recognizing that Sustainable Growth, Digital Society,
Integration 4.0 and Women, SMEs and Inclusive Growth are the
priorities of APEC Chile 2019, we seek to address key issues
related to food security by identifying common priorities as
well as cooperating in defining and implementing better
policies towards integrated, smart and sustainable food
systems.
3. Our region faces major challenges in terms of
food security. We must find ways to provide our rapidly
growing global population with economic access to
sufficient, safe, nutritious and quality food. Furthermore,
the livelihoods of millions of rural people, mainly small
farmers and fishers, particularly women, rely on jobs and
incomes provided by food production and food-related
economic activities.
4. Moreover, food systems have a
dynamic relationship with the environment. We acknowledge
the growing impact that global changes, such as changing
climate conditions; increasing natural disasters; land, soil
and marine habitat degradation; freshwater scarcity; loss of
biological diversity; and the emergence of new pests and
diseases have on the development of productive sectors such
as agriculture, aquaculture and fisheries.
5. We seek
smart solutions, which will be crucial to achieving the
complementary objectives of increased productivity,
sustainability, inclusiveness and resilience.
Fostering
sustainable food systems
6. For food systems to
effectively adapt to global changes while securing long-term
food security, we encourage the development and
implementation of integrated policies for agriculture,
aquaculture and fisheries in line with the spirit of the
APEC Food Security Roadmap Towards 2020 and the UN 2030
Agenda for Sustainable Development. This will contribute to
improving productivity, reducing food loss and waste,
ensuring the conservation, protection and sustainable use of
water, land and marine ecosystems, biodiversity and natural
resources, as well as enhancing society’s
wellbeing.
7. The resilience of our food systems to
climate variability is a priority for our economies because
agricultural production is closely linked to weather
conditions. We recognize the positive role that agriculture
can play in providing solutions to global challenges.
Reducing food loss and waste can also be an adaptive and
mitigation option to reduce the food security risks of new
climate scenarios. We support strengthening regional
cooperation with an aim to creating enabling conditions to
face the challenges and leverage the opportunities brought
by globally changing climatic conditions.
8. We
underscore that the efficient use and sustainable management
of water as well as robust water policies are critical for
the economic performance, social inclusiveness and
environmental sustainability of the whole food system. We
highlight the importance of sharing best practices in these
areas.
9. We acknowledge that the prevention and
reduction of food loss and waste is a multidimensional
challenge that continues to affect food security and
environmental sustainability in the APEC region. We
highlight the importance of strengthening policies along the
entire food chain with the contribution of all relevant
stakeholders. We support further APEC cooperation in
generating information and improving measurements;
strengthening partnerships with all stakeholders;
encouraging research, development and innovation, including
information and communications technology (ICT); raising
awareness and building capacity; and developing robust
policies to prevent and reduce food loss and
waste.
10. We recognize the significance of seafood
consumption, which provides nearly 22 percent of the average
per capita animal protein intake for the APEC region. In
this context, we underscore the importance of protecting the
marine environment and ensuring the sustainable use of
fisheries and aquaculture resources. We call for continued
action to address certain forms of fisheries subsidies as
agreed at the 2019 APEC Ministers Responsible for Trade
meeting and to combat Illegal, Unreported and Unregulated
(IUU) fishing, both of which harm livelihoods, threaten food
security and impede sustainable growth. We welcome the APEC
Roadmap on Combatting IUU Fishing.
11. We recognize that
marine debris, including marine plastic pollution, as a
global and multidisciplinary problem, has an increasingly
adverse impact on the ocean environment, coastal
livelihoods, food security and sustainable growth. We urge
economies to work together to implement and promote measures
to manage and prevent marine debris, including innovative
sustainable waste management systems and sustainable
agriculture, aquaculture and fisheries practices. We welcome
the APEC Roadmap on Marine Debris which supports APEC’s
food security goals.
Embracing innovation, emerging
technologies and digital opportunities
12. Innovation,
emerging technologiesanddigitalization are engines
forsustainable productivity growth in theagriculture,
fisheries and aquaculture food sectors and will be critical
for solving many of our current challenges. We encourage
officials to make innovation a priority, including through
effective coordination with all relevant stakeholders, with
an emphasis on the creation and appropriate adoption of new
technologies.
13. We encourage economies to develop and
maintain transparent and science-based regulatory frameworks
and to share information and experiences.
14. We
acknowledge that the “digitalization” of agriculture
impacts the way that agricultural products are grown,
produced and distributed at different stages of food value
chains. In this fast-changing context, we urge deeper
collaboration and dialogue in APEC with the aim of
identifying common approaches to promoting technology
adoption, challenges and opportunities for human capital,
and developing policy that targets local realities,
effectively leveraging the opportunities from the digital
transformation, sustainably and inclusively.
Leveraging
associativity and enhancing food value chains and
trade
15. Micro, small and medium enterprises (MSMEs),
including small-scale farmers, fishers and aquaculturalists,
indigenous peoples, and women in particular, face
constraints to being competitive in food value chains.
Individually these actors may have limited capacity to
negotiate and less access to the financial system, market
information and new technologies, among other challenges. To
strengthen their resilience and adaptive capacity, we
support promoting more inclusive food value chains,
identifying new trading opportunities, and encouraging
well-functioning markets.
16. Associativity, defined as
alliances and collaborative initiatives along the supply
chain, could be a key dimension to drive progress towards
achieving inclusive economic growth. We encourage the
development of business models that promote associativity
among MSMEs and with other stakeholders, to improve
productivity and competitiveness and strengthen alliances
throughout the supply chain, allowing new stakeholders to
participate in domestic and global food value
chains.
17. We stress the importance that international
trade has for food security. We recognize that efficient and
sustainable food systems require timely access to
international markets. To this end we affirm the importance
of transparent, non-discriminatory and agreed-upon rules,
which enhance market predictability, enable business
confidence, and allow food trade to flow. We recognize that
measures which are inconsistent with international rules,
obligations, and science-based standards, including
non-tariff barriers, may undermine food
security.
Strengthening Rural Development as a Place of
Opportunities
18. We acknowledge the importance of
promoting the development of rural and coastal communities
as they are one of the foundations of the food system in
most of our economies. We recognize that robust and
site-specific policies are required to promote the
comprehensive development of rural populations, which
reflect the diversity of needs and opportunities. We
encourage rural policies that address issues beyond
agriculture and promote rural development with a holistic
approach that accounts for economic, social, environmental
and cultural dimensions, and working with all
stakeholders.
19. We encourage policies that improve
infrastructure, basic services and the quality of life of
rural populations as well as strategies that help develop
sustainable and market-based methods for adding value to
agricultural, forestry, fisheries and aquaculture while
promoting the integration of MSMEs within food value
chains.
20. We highlight the importance of promoting
competitive, sustainable and quality food systems, including
traditional systems that contribute to rural
development.
21. We encourage the incorporation of gender
into the design of rural development policies from the very
outset. Higher levels of women participation in the economy
is key to raising living standards and boosting economic
growth in the region. We recognize the significant
contribution and impact that women have in rural and coastal
communities. Recognizing the importance of empowering women,
we take note of the ongoing initiative to develop APEC Best
Practice Guidelines on Women in Agriculture and Fisheries
and we look forward to the outcomes.
Looking
forward
22. We support the efforts of the PPFS, ATCWG,
HLPDAB and OFWG within APEC that contribute to food security
and encourage these groups to strengthen their collaboration
in working towards integrated, smart and sustainable food
systems.
23. We reiterate the importance of public and
private sector collaboration in addressing current and
future challenges for food security. We affirm the
importance of strengthening and invigorating APEC engagement
with the private sector including ABAC in
PPFS.
24. Reflecting on our efforts under the APEC Food
Security Roadmap Towards 2020, we call for the review and
identification of ongoing priorities and future
opportunities to enhance food security in the region beyond
2020.